Publication | Closed Access
Multiple Ontologies and the Problem of the Body in History
150
Citations
39
References
2012
Year
Human BodyArchaeological TheoryMultiple OntologiesFundamental Anthropological QuestionMaterial CultureBioarchaeologyEthnohistoryEducationArchaeologyPhilosophy Of HistoryEthnographyAnthropologyLanguage StudiesHistorical ScholarshipSocial AnthropologyCultural AnthropologyAbstract Object Theory
ABSTRACT In this article, we return to a fundamental anthropological question: How can we understand apparently incommensurate perspectives on the human body? While applauding recent moves to place local people's perspectives on an ontological rather than epistemological footing, we suggest that both of these approaches fail to explain how different ontological perspectives can ever communicate with one another and how historical change takes place. To understand this, we offer a different model of multiple ontologies that also makes room for physical materials; we explore this through the ontologies of Native America and Western Europe from medieval times to the present day.
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