La chagra de la vida: Plant intelligence as becomings
Lade...
DOI der Originalpublikation
Projekttyp
angewandte Forschung
Projektbeginn
01.01.2025
Projektende
28.08.2025
Projektstatus
abgeschlossen
Projektkontakt
Projektmanager:in
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung
The Amazonian Chagra is more than a food and medicinal garden—it is a site of mutualism where plants and humans co-create, communicate, and shape their shared environment. Rooted in Indigenous agroforestry, the Chagra fosters biocultural sovereignty through embodied exchanges of care, healing, and knowledge. This article explores plant intelligence beyond problem-solving, emphasizing meaning-making and intelligibility. Through fieldwork in Putumayo, I examine how plants and humans engage in reciprocal acts that shape land-use practices, sustain ecological balance, and redefine interspecies agency.
Link
Während FHNW Zugehörigkeit erstellt
Ja
Zukunftsfelder FHNW
New Work
Hochschule
Hochschule fĂĽr Gestaltung und Kunst Basel FHNW
Institut
Institut Kunst Gender Natur
Finanziert durch
Schweizerischer Nationalfonds (SNF)
Projektpartner
Quinchoa Juajibioy, AyĂŞnan
Uribe Macias, Natalia
Uribe Macias, Natalia
Auftraggeberschaft
SAP Referenz
Schlagwörter
Intelligibility
Indigenous Agriculture
Relationality
Agroforestry
Ethnomedicine
Photo Essay
Indigenous Agriculture
Relationality
Agroforestry
Ethnomedicine
Photo Essay