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bsas seminar

Department seminar: Maggie Bolton

The Department of Social Anthropology is happy to announce the upcoming seminar with Maggie Bolton (University of Aberdeen). The title of the lecture is "The Fragility of Relations of Domestication: Humans, Llamas and Unseasonal Snowfalls in Sud Lípez, Bolivia".

distribution of humanitarian aid after  the snowfall
Distribution of humanitarian aid at a church after unseasonal snowfall, Sud Lípez, Bolivia.
Photo:
Maggie Bolton

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Seminar paper

This paper takes the context of an unseasonal severe snowfall in the highlands of Bolivia in 2002, to examine relations between Andean people and their llama herds. The approach taken here brings together two strands of anthropological writing on human-animal relations and the environment. 

The first emphasises animal domestication as a material and spatial relationship, drawing on the work of David Anderson who has worked in northern herding societies. Anderson writes of architectures of domestication, examining how the attention of many different species, and the artefacts of that attention, come to work together in a particular setting.

The second strand of writing I use concerns the weather. Tim Ingold writes that rather than consider human and other life unfolding in a landscape, which suggests features of and things on the surface of the earth, we should speak of a ‘weather-world,’ for this conveys something of the medium in which life unfolds. Considering the ‘weather-world’, how it was transformed by snow in the Bolivian highlands and its influence on human-animal relations adds a temporal dimension to Anderson’s emphasis on architectures.

It also highlights the fragility of relations of domestication – how the bonds between humans and animals can be broken and only re-established with effort. Given that extreme weather events appear to be on the increase, the ethnography presented here demonstrates one way in which climate change appears to be threatening the lifestyle of indigenous people in the high Andes. 

About the lecturer

Maggie Bolton came to anthropology after a first career in physics and engineering. She gained her PhD in social anthropology from the University of St Andrews in 2001, having carried out fieldwork in highland Bolivia on mining and camelid herding. She has since lectured in anthropology at the universities of Manchester and Hull and has been based at the University of Aberdeen since 2009. Her postdoctoral research returned to camelid herding, focusing on attempts to rationalise and commercialise Andean llama herds. Her current research has returned to mining with a historical study of the contributions of Aberdonian entrepreneurs to Bolivian silver and tin mining in the late-19th and early-20th centuries.

Light refreshments will be served in the Corner Room after the seminar. All interested are welcome!