{"title":"Photographic images of indigenous peoples in contemporary Chilean poetry","authors":"Lorena P. López Torres","doi":"10.56294/cid202376","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article analyzes the literary proposals De la tierra sin fuegos (1986) and Reducciones (2012) by the Chilean poets Juan Pablo Riveros and Jaime Huenún respectively; works in which the intersection between word and image is privileged in a deconstructive and questioning eagerness. The photographic image of native peoples that is materially incorporated into the textual body of the poems comes, on the one hand, from ethnographic/anthropometric archives, from the priest and ethnologist Martin Gusinde, and from the scientists Robert Lehmann-Nitsche, Herman Ten Kate, Francisco P. Moreno and Hans Virchow. Through this verbovisual assemblage, two different perspectives are presented regarding the procedures of scrutiny that the ethnologist/scientist follows when approaching the indigenous person and the reading he makes of him and his culture: the first becomes a fellow tribesman, while the others exercise a biosocial control over the indigenous person by freely disposing of his corporeality for scientific purposes. In this way, the texts resort to images to reflect on the materialization of ethnographic photography and the material and metaphysical \"capture\" of the indigenous; they problematize the photographic act, the revealing character of the image and its scenic implications in the exhibition of the indigenous in order to corroborate, denounce and give a face to these subjects. In addition, they point to the hunters and situate the historical context under which these takeovers take place, that is, they are images that violate the viewer by confronting him with the usurpation and death that weighs on the indigenous, particularly in contexts of internal colonization (nineteenth and twentieth centuries).","PeriodicalId":500900,"journal":{"name":"Community and Interculturality in Dialogue","volume":"95 S3","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Community and Interculturality in Dialogue","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.56294/cid202376","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article analyzes the literary proposals De la tierra sin fuegos (1986) and Reducciones (2012) by the Chilean poets Juan Pablo Riveros and Jaime Huenún respectively; works in which the intersection between word and image is privileged in a deconstructive and questioning eagerness. The photographic image of native peoples that is materially incorporated into the textual body of the poems comes, on the one hand, from ethnographic/anthropometric archives, from the priest and ethnologist Martin Gusinde, and from the scientists Robert Lehmann-Nitsche, Herman Ten Kate, Francisco P. Moreno and Hans Virchow. Through this verbovisual assemblage, two different perspectives are presented regarding the procedures of scrutiny that the ethnologist/scientist follows when approaching the indigenous person and the reading he makes of him and his culture: the first becomes a fellow tribesman, while the others exercise a biosocial control over the indigenous person by freely disposing of his corporeality for scientific purposes. In this way, the texts resort to images to reflect on the materialization of ethnographic photography and the material and metaphysical "capture" of the indigenous; they problematize the photographic act, the revealing character of the image and its scenic implications in the exhibition of the indigenous in order to corroborate, denounce and give a face to these subjects. In addition, they point to the hunters and situate the historical context under which these takeovers take place, that is, they are images that violate the viewer by confronting him with the usurpation and death that weighs on the indigenous, particularly in contexts of internal colonization (nineteenth and twentieth centuries).
本文分析了智利诗人胡安·巴勃罗·里维拉斯(Juan Pablo Riveros)和杰米(Jaime Huenún)分别在1986年和2012年提出的文学建议De la tierra sin fuegos;在这些作品中,文字和图像之间的交集在解构和质疑的渴望中享有特权。土著民族的摄影图像被纳入诗歌的文本主体,一方面,来自民族志/人体测量学档案,来自牧师和民族学家Martin Gusinde,来自科学家Robert lehman - nitsche, Herman Ten Kate, Francisco P. Moreno和Hans Virchow。通过这种语言组合,呈现了两种不同的观点,关于民族学家/科学家在接近土著人时所遵循的审查程序,以及他对土著人及其文化的解读:第一种观点成为部落同胞,而其他观点则通过为科学目的自由处置土著人的肉体,对土著人进行生物社会控制。这样,文本借助图像来反思民族志摄影的物质化和对土著的物质性和形而上的“捕捉”;他们质疑摄影行为,图像的揭示特征及其在土著展览中的风景含义,以证实,谴责并给予这些主题一个面貌。此外,它们指向猎人,并将这些占领发生的历史背景置于其中,也就是说,它们是侵犯观众的图像,让他面对压迫在土著人身上的篡夺和死亡,特别是在内部殖民的背景下(19世纪和20世纪)。