Extra-Botanical Capacities: Plant Agency and Relational Extractivism in Contemporary Amazonia

  • Karen Shiratori
  • , Emanuele Fabiano

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

What is a plant? A photosynthesizing organism, molecule, commodity, songs, images, oniric experience, spirit…Indigenous perspectives show that plants cannot be thought of without the relationships that constitute them. We contextualize our reflection in plant extractive activities that, by reducing sociality with these non-humans to anonymous, non-situated knowledge, feed a transit of knowledge based on a relational extractivism. Thus, in this article, based on one historical case and another ethnographic one involving two South American plants—cinchona (Cinchona officinalis) and matico (Piper aduncum)—we present a reflection on plant agency from the perspective of Amazonian peoples, with the intention of showing how these beings are conceived of as subjects who are part of kinship relations, but also of predation. We take shamanic and artistic experiences as ethnographic cases to argue that the Western categories of biology are insufficient to define and circumscribe the so-called plant kingdom according to certain Amazonian conceptions.

Idioma originalInglés
Número de artículo114
PublicaciónPhilosophies
Volumen10
N.º5
DOI
EstadoPublicada - oct. 2025
Publicado de forma externa

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