Looking Like the Land: Beauty and Aesthetics in Amazonian Quichua Philosophy and Practice

Tod D. Swanson, Jarrad Reddekop

Resumo


This article offers an account of Quichua thinking about beauty in the Ecuadorian Amazon: how it is grounded in a philosophical tradition that conceives the world and the self in “perspectivist” and relational terms, and how experiences of beauty play specific roles and attain a particular kind of sense within that context. In particular, we show how indigenous Quichua ideas about beauty inform a range of everyday practices and are intimately connected to distinct ideas about what it means to live a good or mature life. This maturity involves cultivating the self as a body shared with the land, taking on its styles, and responding empathetically to it. But it also means leaving space for others, respecting the boundaries of privacy that emerge through the differentiation of species and the formation of distinct aesthetic communities within particular territories.


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Direitos autorais 2020 Tod D. Swanson, Jarrad Reddekop

Licença Creative Commons
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