Ontological Conflicts and the Stories of Peoples in Spite of Europe
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Abstract
Ontological conflicts (conflicts involving different assumptions about “what exists”) are gaining unprecedented visibility because the hegemony of modern ontological assumptions is undergoing a crisis. Such crisis provides the context and rationale for political ontology, a “project” that, emerging from the convergence of indigenous studies, science and technology studies (STS), posthumanism, and political ecology, tackles ontological conflicts as a politicoconceptual (one word) problem. Why? First, because in order to even consider ontological conflicts as a possibility, one must question some of the most profoundly established assumptions in the social sciences, for instance, the assumptions that we are all…
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Epistemology
- Ontology
- Modernity
- Politics
- Sociology
- Indigenous
- Context (archaeology)
- Hegemony
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