SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.14Living systematic review: Tools to ensure its qualityOrganizational self-recognition: A key factor for absorptive capability author indexsubject indexarticles search
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

  • Have no similar articlesSimilars in SciELO

Share


New Trends in Qualitative Research

On-line version ISSN 2184-7770

Abstract

SERRANO,, David Figueroa  and  VALDES,, Alma Esli Bernal. Anthropoanimal metaphors. A methodological approach for a ethnography of multispecies alterity. NTQR [online]. 2022, vol.14, e714.  Epub Aug 01, 2022. ISSN 2184-7770.  https://doi.org/10.36367/ntqr.14.2022.e714-0.

The objective of this text is to describe and analyze the relationships of interspecies coexistence of two entities -humans and dogs-, as well as the metaphorical artistic representations generated from the significance of this relationship in a Zapotec community in Mexico. We start from two basic aspects: the need to express the complexity of a world so diverse in its interactions; on the other hand, the metaphorical presence as a creative dimension, but at the same time, defining the ontological condition of the relations between species. The indigenous communities that have forged different long- term narrative traditions, whether oral, plastic or others, are based on these to recreate their imaginaries. This creative process conceives various possibilities of being and living with the entities with which the world is shared. Interspecies relationships are generated from inherencies and coexistence where "logocentrism" is not the basis of differentiation. The search for and closeness to the "animal" is generated through various metaphorical figurations where the action or the conjunction of its myth-praxis are latent. We make a description of the daily experiences that link dogs with humans, their coexistence spaces, contexts, assessments, to account for interspecies relationships, the foundations that inspire them and what it generates. A corpus of narratives was collected, from which we identified ethnocategories from a contextual analysis. We worked with three murals and fifteen artistic works called alebrijes, based on the creative intentions of the authors, their imaginaries and cultural inspirations -both from oral tradition and from everyday and artistic experiences.

Keywords : Multispecies ethnography; Metaphorical constructs; Otherness; Methodology; Alebrije..

        · abstract in Spanish     · text in Spanish     · Spanish ( pdf )