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Title

Can the subaltern eat? Anthropophagic culture as a Brazilian lens on post-colonial theory.

Authors

Islam, Gazi

Abstract

I propose the concept of anthropophagy as a metaphor for understanding Brazilian organizational knowledge, contributing to post-colonial thought, and better understanding issues of cultural mix and hybridity essential to contemporary social theory. After describing the diverse meanings of anthropophagy, I outline three important moments in Brazilian history where the concept has been central to understanding intercultural mixture. First, anthropophagy was an important component of indigenous reactions to intercultural contact, providing a ritual mechanism by which to negotiate identity. This identity crafting mechanism became revived in the 20th century modernist and tropicalist periods, where it took on symbolic functions in positioning modern Brazilian identity with respect to both European and indigenous roots. More recently, anthropophagy has entered the organizational literature, providing novel ways to make sense of key concepts in the discipline. I discuss three central issues around which anthropophagy contributes to contemporary theory, those of otherness, authenticity, and corporality.

Subjects

CANNIBALISM; CULTURAL awareness; SUBALTERN; CULTURAL fusion; IDENTITY (Philosophical concept); POSTCOLONIAL analysis; BRAZILIANS

Publication

Organization, 2012, Vol 19, Issue 2, p159

ISSN

1350-5084

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1177/1350508411429396

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