Colección SciELO Chile

Departamento Gestión de Conocimiento, Monitoreo y Prospección
Consultas o comentarios: productividad@anid.cl
Búsqueda Publicación
Búsqueda por Tema Título, Abstract y Keywords



When the Winds Run with the Earth Cannibal Winds and Climate Disruption in Isluga, Northern Chile
Indexado
WoS WOS:000613458400001
Scopus SCOPUS_ID:85100347221
DOI 10.1086/713083
Año 2021
Tipo artículo de investigación

Citas Totales

Autores Afiliación Chile

Instituciones Chile

% Participación
Internacional

Autores
Afiliación Extranjera

Instituciones
Extranjeras


Abstract



This report uses a conceptual frame of "weather-worlding" to approach, in an atmospherically attuned manner, people's knowledge concerning the formation and transformation of weather conditions. It explores observed patterning in winds and rains as a product of more than a single generation's understanding. New ethnographic fieldwork findings from Isluga, northern Chile, are juxtaposed with information from notes made during previous periods of fieldwork that we have conducted since the late 1970s and the 1980s. Comparisons with other anthropologists' findings, seventeenth-century dictionary entries, and meteorological explanations are used to deepen the historical context for how people talk about winds, rain, and weather disruptions. While their observations of rainfall patterns concur with meteorologically collected data in important aspects, their accounts of disruptions to weather patterns provide a vivid portrayal of the winds' unpredictable power to prevent precipitation from falling during the rainy season. People's sensorial experiences of the winds emphasize the nonvisual, audible character of the elements, and our research participants personify bitterly cold westerlies as unruly, disruptive cannibal brothers. The text of this report coalesces round the themes of living in an arid land shaped by winds and what happens when the seasons are disrupted in a ceaselessly windblown atmosphere.

Revista



Revista ISSN
Current Anthropology 0011-3204

Métricas Externas



PlumX Altmetric Dimensions

Muestra métricas de impacto externas asociadas a la publicación. Para mayor detalle:

Disciplinas de Investigación



WOS
Anthropology
Scopus
Sin Disciplinas
SciELO
Sin Disciplinas

Muestra la distribución de disciplinas para esta publicación.

Publicaciones WoS (Ediciones: ISSHP, ISTP, AHCI, SSCI, SCI), Scopus, SciELO Chile.

Colaboración Institucional



Muestra la distribución de colaboración, tanto nacional como extranjera, generada en esta publicación.


Autores - Afiliación



Ord. Autor Género Institución - País
1 Dransart, Penelope Mujer UNIV ABERDEEN - Reino Unido
University of Aberdeen - Reino Unido
2 Ortega Perrier, Marietta Mujer Universidad de Tarapacá - Chile
2 Perrier, Marietta Ortega Mujer Universidad de Tarapacá - Chile

Muestra la afiliación y género (detectado) para los co-autores de la publicación.

Financiamiento



Fuente
Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research
Wenner-Gren Foundation

Muestra la fuente de financiamiento declarada en la publicación.

Agradecimientos



Agradecimiento
We are deeply indebted to the people of Isluga for their help. We acknowledge financial support from the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research for our 2017 fieldwork and thank three anonymous referees for comments.
We are deeply indebted to the people of Isluga for their help. We acknowledge financial support from the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research for our 2017 field-work and thank three anonymous referees for comments.

Muestra la fuente de financiamiento declarada en la publicación.