We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
El sueño de Europa Alexander von Humboldt y la comunicación con la alteridad en Homo-Humus y Mburucuyá, cuadros de la naturaleza de Jorge Acha.
- Authors
Iván Duarte, Ezequiel
- Abstract
This essay addresses the problem of communication as it is displayed by the screenplay Homo-Humus and the feature film Mburucuyá, cuadros de la naturaleza by Jorge Acha. Both works focus on part of Alexander von Humboldt and Aimé Bonpland's journey through South America, specifically their stay in the Orinoco jungle and their contact with the Yaruro people. Humboldt contemplates nature ecstatically and aesthetically, but that way of relating to the environment is instrumental to the collection of specimens and the making of measurements of all kinds without understanding how this procedure affects the worldview of the indigenous people. This contradiction marks an internal division within Humboldt himself. Bonpland, for his part, departs from Alexander's attitude as he blends in with the local population, thus embodying an alternative way of knowing. The Yaruros, in turn, maintain a poetic relationship with the environment, their way of communicating, unlike Humboldt's, does not break the continuum between culture and nature. Acha proposes, as a communicative solution to the disagreement, that Europeans and indigenous people eat each other's lice, hence that they fraternize carnally and horizontally.
- Subjects
HUMBOLDT, Alexander von, 1769-1859; INDIGENOUS peoples; SCREENPLAYS; SCIENTIFIC expeditions; COMMUNICATION barriers; LICE; WORLDVIEW
- Publication
Question (1669-6581), 2022, Vol 3, Issue 73, p1
- ISSN
1669-6581
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.24215/16696581e741