Articles
Luciano von der Goltz Vianna
The present article starts from a debate that aims to understand how the disciplinary regimes of Anthropology lead the researcher to follow a protocol of questions and interests in his research. The objective here is to discuss the existing
[+]Articles
Rocío Fatyass
Neste artigo retomo ideias emergentes de um projeto de pesquisa com crianças que acontece em um bairro periurbano da cidade de Villa Nueva (Córdoba, Argentina) e discuto a agência das crianças e sua participação na pesquisa em ciências
[+]Articles
Aline Moreira Magalhães
Since expeditions by naturalists in the 18th century, the production of modern knowledge about the flora and fauna of the Amazon has included people who know the ecosystem from experience. At the National Institute for Amazon Research (INPA),
[+]Interdisciplinarities
Juliana Pereira, Ana Catarina Costa, André Carmo, Eduardo Ascensão
This article draws on the genealogy of studies on the house in Portuguese Anthropology and Architecture as well as on recent perspectives coming from the Geographies of Architecture, to explore the way residents of auteur architecture experience
[+]Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”
Annabelle Dias Félix, Maria João Leote de Carvalho, Catarina Frois
In the global political landscape, as far-right parties gain prominence, populist rhetoric advocating for harsher justice and security policies is becoming increasingly prevalent. Proponents of this rhetoric base their discourse on “alarming”
[+]Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”
Susana Durão, Paola Argentin
In this article we argue that hospitality security – a modality that confuses control and care – operates through the actions of security guards in the creation of what we call pre-cases. From a dense ethnography accompanying these workers in a
[+]Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”
Pedro Varela
Racist police violence is one of the most brutal facets of racism in our society, reflecting structures of power and oppression that marginalize sectors of our society. This paper emphasizes the importance of understanding this reality, highlighting
[+]Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”
Catarina Frois
This article engages with contemporary anthropological and ethnographic methodological debates by reflecting on the challenges of conducting research in contexts related with marginality, deviance, surveillance, and imprisonment. It examines the
[+]Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”
Lydia Letsch
Qualitative researchers face unique challenges in the dynamic domain of border regions, particularly when venturing into highly securitized areas with a constant military presence, advanced surveillance, and restricted access zones. This article
[+]Memory
Rita Tomé, João Leal
Falecido recentemente, Victor Bandeira (1931-2024) desempenhou um papel fundamental no desenvolvimento da museologia etnográfica em Portugal. Foi graças às suas expedições a África (1960-1961, 1966, 1967), ao Brasil (1964-1965) e à Indonésia
[+]Lévi-Strauss Award
Jo P. Klinkerfus
This paper is a reduced and synthesized version of the ethnography on PMSC Notícia, the news platform of the Military Police of Santa Catarina (PMSC). Based on news about death, dying and the dead published on the website in 2021, social
[+]Artigos
Antonio Maria Pusceddu
This article mobilizes the ecologies of value as a conceptual framework to account for the conflicts, contradictions and dilemmas arousing from the experience of the contemporary socio-ecological crisis. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Brindisi,
[+]Artigos
Axel Levin
This ethnographic article addresses the difficulties, practices, and strategies of the professionals of the only Argentine hospital fully specialized in the treatment of mental health problems of children and adolescents. More specifically, it
[+]Artigos
Morena Freitas
The ibejadas are childlike entities that, alongside the caboclos, pretos-velhos, exus, and pombagiras, inhabit the umbanda pantheon. In religious centers, these entities manifest through colorful images, joyful sung chants and an abundance of sweets
[+]Artigos
Pablo Mardones
The article analyzes the Anata-Carnival festivity celebrated in the Andean town of Chiapa in the Tarapacá Region, Great North of Chile. I suggest that this celebration constitutes one of the main events that promote the reproduction of feelings of
[+]Artigos
Marta Roriz
Drawing on anthropological and ethnographic developments in the study of urban tourism, this essay offers a description of Sarajevo’s tourist landscapes from the perspective of an ethnographic tourist, detailing how time is inscribed in the
[+]Memory
Lorenzo Macagno
The article comments on, contextualizes and transcribes the epistolary exchange between social anthropologist David J. Webster (1945-1989) and ethnologist and Portuguese colonial official António Rita-Ferreira (1922-2014) between 1971 and 1979.
[+]Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’
Luzia Oca González, Fernando Barbosa Rodrigues and Iria Vázquez Silva
Neste dossiê sobre o género e os cuidados na comunidade transnacional cabo-verdiana, as leitoras e leitores encontrarão os resultados de diferentes etnografias feitas tanto em Cabo Verde como nos países de destino da sua diáspora no sul da
[+]Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’
Fernando Barbosa Rodrigues
Taking the ethnographic field as a starting point – the interior of the island of Santiago in the Republic of Cabo Verde – and basing on participant observation and the collection of testimonies from the local inhabitants of Brianda, this
[+]Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’
Andréa Lobo and André Omisilê Justino
This article reflects on the care category when crossed by the dynamics of gender and generation in Cape Verde. The act of caring is of fundamental importance for family dynamics in this society, which is marked by mobilities of multiple orders –
[+]Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’
Luzia Oca González and Iria Vázquez Silva
This article is based on fieldwork conducted with women of four generations, belonging to five families living in the locality of Burela (Galicia) and their domestic groups originating from the island of Santiago. We present three ethnographic
[+]Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’
Keina Espiñeira González, Belén Fernández-Suárez and Antía Pérez-Caramés
The reconciliation of the personal, work and family spheres of migrants is an emerging issue in migration studies, with concepts such as the transnational family and global care chains. In this contribution we analyse the strategies deployed by
[+]Debate
Filipe Verde
This article questions the consistency, reasonableness, and fruitfulness of the methodological proposals and idea of anthropological knowledge of the “ontological turn” in anthropology. Taking as its starting point the book manifesto produced by
[+]Debate
Rogério Brittes W. Pires
O artigo “Estrangeiros universais”, de Filipe Verde, apresenta uma crítica ao que chama de “viragem ontológica” na antropologia, tomando o livro The Ontological Turn, de Holbraad e Pedersen (2017), como ponto de partida (2025a: 252).1 O
[+]Debate
Filipe Verde
Se há evidência que a antropologia sempre reconheceu é a de que o meio em que somos inculturados molda de forma decisiva a nossa compreensão do mundo e de nós mesmos. Isso é assim para a própria antropologia e, portanto, ser antropólogo é
[+]Debate
Rogério Brittes W. Pires
Um erro do construtivismo clássico é postular que verdades alheias seriam construídas socialmente, mas as do próprio enunciador não. Que minha visão de mundo, do fazer antropológico e da ciência sejam moldadas por meu ambiente – em
[+]Note on the cover
Pedro Calapez
© Pedro Calapez. 2023. (Pormenor) Díptico B; Técnica e Suporte: Acrílico sobre tela colada em MDF e estrutura em madeira. Dimensões: 192 x 120 x 4 cm. Imagem gentilmente cedidas pelo autor. Créditos fotográficos: MPPC / Pedro
[+]Interview with Rosa Maria Perez, anthropologist, integrated researcher at CRIA-Iscte, retired Professor in the Anthropology department at Iscte and Professor at the Indian Institute of Technology, Gandhinagar, India.
Starting with the experience of coming into contact with the discipline of anthropology, this interview covers the researcher's work in India, which began with her doctorate and resulted in the publication of ‘Kings and Untouchables. A study of the caste system in North-West India’ (translated into English by Orient Blackswan in 2004) and which has been consolidated into a specialisation in the context of India, particularly around issues of marginality, both social and gender. These were and are the leitmotif of his research, both in Gujarat and Goa. In Goa, the ethnographic realities studied by Rosa Maria Perez reveal complexities that contribute to the construction of a view that goes beyond the dominant perspective of studies that reduce this context to spaces of colonial memory. The interview also addresses the scarcity of methodological reflections on fieldwork done by women and with women in the context of India and its populations, and the need to counteract this silencing and give a voice to women, both researchers and participants in their research. It ends with a reflection on the role and impact of anthropology on society, given the potential of collaborative and public anthropology, combined with rigorous ethics, to denounce situations of human devaluation which, in the case of India as elsewhere, pose scientific and societal challenges for contemporary anthropology.
The interview was conducted by Inês Lourenço at the FCCN studios on 22 May 2024.
Entrevista a Rosa Maria Perez, antropóloga, investigadora integrada do CRIA-Iscte, Professora jubilada do departamento de Antropologia do Iscte e Professora no Indian Institute of Technology, Gandhinagar, Índia.
Começando pela experiência de contacto com a disciplina da antropologia, esta entrevista estende-se pelo trabalho da investigadora na Índia, que teve início no seu doutoramento e que resultou na publicação de “Reis e Intocáveis. Um estudo do sistema de castas no Noroeste da Índia” (traduzido para inglês pela Orient Blackswan em 2004) e que se foi consolidando numa especialização no contexto da Índia, particularmente em torno de questões de marginalidade, quer social, quer de género. Estas foram e são o fio condutor das suas pesquisas, quer no Gujarate, quer em Goa. Em Goa, as realidades etnográficas estudadas por Rosa Maria Perez revelam complexidades que contribuem para a construção de um olhar que vai além da perspectiva dominante dos estudos que reduzem este contexto aos espaços de memória colonial. A entrevista aborda também a escassez de reflexões metodológicas sobre trabalho de campo feito por mulheres e com mulheres no contexto da Índia e das suas populações, e a necessidade de contrariar este silenciamento e de dar voz a mulheres, quer investigadoras, quer participantes nas suas investigações. Termina com uma reflexão sobre o papel e o impacto da antropologia na sociedade, dado o potencial da antropologia colaborativa e pública, aliado a uma ética rigorosa, para denunciar situações de desvalorização humana que, no caso da Índia, como noutros lugares, desempenham desafios científicos e societais para a antropologia contemporânea.
A entrevista foi conduzida por Inês Lourenço, e realizada nos estúdios da FCCN, a 22 de maio de 2024.
Entrevista a Rosa María Pérez, antropóloga, investigadora integrada en CRIA-Iscte, profesora jubilada del departamento de Antropología de Iscte y profesora del Indian Institute of Technology, Gandhinagar, India.
Partiendo de la experiencia de entrar en contacto con la disciplina de la antropología, esta entrevista recorre el trabajo de la investigadora en la India, que comenzó con su doctorado y desembocó en la publicación de «Kings and Untouchables. A study of the caste system in North-West India» (traducido al inglés por Orient Blackswan en 2004) y que se ha consolidado en una especialización en el contexto de la India, en particular en torno a las cuestiones de marginalidad, tanto social como de género. Éstas fueron y son el leitmotiv de sus investigaciones, tanto en Gujarat como en Goa. En Goa, las realidades etnográficas estudiadas por Rosa María Pérez revelan complejidades que contribuyen a la construcción de una mirada que va más allá de la perspectiva dominante de los estudios que reducen este contexto a espacios de memoria colonial. La entrevista también aborda la escasez de reflexiones metodológicas sobre el trabajo de campo realizado por mujeres y con mujeres en el contexto de la India y sus poblaciones, y la necesidad de contrarrestar este silenciamiento y dar voz a las mujeres, tanto investigadoras como participantes en sus investigaciones. Concluye con una reflexión sobre el papel y el impacto de la antropología en la sociedad, dado el potencial de la antropología colaborativa y pública, combinada con una ética rigurosa, para denunciar situaciones de desvalorización humana que, en el caso de la India como en otros lugares, plantean retos científicos y sociales a la antropología contemporánea.
La entrevista fue realizada por Inês Lourenço en los estudios del FCCN el 22 de mayo de 2024.
Entretien avec Rosa Maria Perez, anthropologue, chercheur intégré au CRIA-Iscte, professeur retraité du département d'anthropologie de l'Iscte et professeur à l'Indian Institute of Technology, Gandhinagar, Inde.
Partant de l'expérience du contact avec la discipline anthropologique, cet entretien couvre le travail de la chercheuse en Inde, qui a commencé avec son doctorat et a abouti à la publication de « Kings and Untouchables. A study of the caste system in North-West India » (traduit en anglais par Orient Blackswan en 2004) et qui s'est consolidé en une spécialisation dans le contexte de l'Inde, notamment autour des questions de marginalité, tant sociale que de genre. Ces questions ont été et sont toujours le leitmotiv de ses recherches, tant au Gujarat qu'à Goa. À Goa, les réalités ethnographiques étudiées par Rosa Maria Perez révèlent des complexités qui contribuent à la construction d'un regard qui dépasse la perspective dominante des études qui réduisent ce contexte à des espaces de mémoire coloniale. L'entretien aborde également la rareté des réflexions méthodologiques sur le travail de terrain réalisé par les femmes et avec les femmes dans le contexte de l'Inde et de ses populations, et la nécessité de contrer ce silence et de donner la parole aux femmes, à la fois chercheuses et participantes à leurs recherches. Il se termine par une réflexion sur le rôle et l'impact de l'anthropologie sur la société, étant donné le potentiel de l'anthropologie collaborative et publique, combinée à une éthique rigoureuse, pour dénoncer les situations de dévalorisation humaine qui, dans le cas de l'Inde comme ailleurs, posent des défis scientifiques et sociétaux à l'anthropologie contemporaine.
L'entretien a été réalisé par Inês Lourenço dans les studios du FCCN le 22 mai 2024.