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Full text | |
Author(s): |
Rodrigo Charafeddine Bulamah
[1]
Total Authors: 1
|
Affiliation: | [1] Universidade Federal de São Paulo - Brasil
Total Affiliations: 1
|
Document type: | Journal article |
Source: | Horiz. antropol.; v. 26, n. 57, p. 57-92, 2020-07-20. |
Abstract | |
Abstract This article analyses the creole pig massacre in Hispaniola, particularly in Haiti, that happened between the end of 1970s and early 1980s. Drawing from both an ethnographic work and a historical analysis, I first focus on the trajectory of a disease that affected domestic pigs in the whole globe and generated a series of politics and scientific assemblages to contain its spread. From there, I analyze the cultural and political motivations and the techno-scientific means that gave rise to the massacre as well as the different theories about the disease. On the last part, I discuss the impacts of the massacre in peasants’ daily life, arguing that this event became, according to specialists, a ritual sacrifice that aimed at modernizing Haiti’s pigs raising systems. My argument here is that this event reveals concurrent visions of animals and domestication. (AU) | |
FAPESP's process: | 19/04170-4 - Carbonscapes: affects, energy and materialities in the Caribbean |
Grantee: | Rodrigo Charafeddine Bulamah |
Support Opportunities: | Scholarships in Brazil - Post-Doctoral |