Cashinahua perspectives on functional anatomy: Ontology, ontogenesis, and biomedical education in Amazonia

Cecilia Mccallum*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Ontological dimensions of encounters between Brazilian biomedical Cartesianism and Amerindian perspectivism come into sharp focus in an intensive course in functional anatomy offered to trainee indigenous health agents in Acre state, Brazil. After presenting the biomedics' rationalization of the course, which centered on the supervised dissection of a cadaver, I look at Cashinahua students' accounts of their participation in the training and consider the broader implications of this particular engagement between two profoundly different philosophical traditions from the angle of the ontogenesis of meaning. I contextualize the students' views of the cadaver through discussion of Cashinahua phenomenology of the body and cumulative personhood. Rather than revealing a confrontation between distinct "cultures," as suggested by the term interculturality, analysis supports a focus on the interplay between ontology and epistemology within historically specific ontogenetic processes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)504-517
Number of pages14
JournalAmerican Ethnologist
Volume41
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2014

Keywords

  • Amerindian perspectivism
  • Biomedical education
  • Brazilian Amazonia
  • Cashinahua
  • Indigenous health agents
  • Ontogenesis
  • Ontology

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