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dc.contributor.advisorGay y Blasco, Paloma
dc.contributor.advisorBunn, Stephanie
dc.contributor.authorCastellanos Montes, Daniela
dc.coverage.spatial226en_US
dc.date.accessioned2013-03-20T14:19:41Z
dc.date.available2013-03-20T14:19:41Z
dc.date.issued2012-12-04
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10023/3404
dc.description.abstractThis thesis is an anthropological exploration of the envy of Aguabuena people, a small rural community of potters in the village of Ráquira, in the Boyacá region of Andean Colombia. Based on long-term ethnographic fieldwork among these potters, I propose an understanding of envy in Aguabuena as an existential experience, shaping relationships between the self and others in the world, crosscutting metaphysical and physical spheres, and balancing between corrosive and more empathetic ways of co-existence. Disclosing the multipresence of envy in Aguabuena’s world, its effects on people (including the ethnographer), and the way envy is embodied, performed, reciprocated and circumvented by the potters, I locate envy in various contexts where it is said to be manifested. Furthermore, I discuss the complex spectrum of envy and its multivalent meanings, or oscillations, in the life of Aguabuena people. I also present interactions with people surrounding potters, such as Augustinian monks, crafts middlemen, and municipal authorities, all of whom recount the envy of potters. My research challenges previous anthropological interpretations on envy and provides an alternative reading of this phenomenon. Moving away from labelling and regulatory explanations of envy, performative models, or pathological interpretations of the subject, I analyse the lived experience of envy and how it encompasses different realms of experience as well as flows of social relations. While focusing on the tensions and entanglements that envy brings to potters, as it constrains social life but also activates and reinforces social bonds, I examine the channels through which envy circulates and how it is put into motion by potters. Additionally, my thesis intends to contribute to anthropological studies of rural pottery communities in Andean Colombia. I present my unfolding understanding of envy by using both the potters’ concept and material detail, punto, location, referring to a spot from where Aguabuena people enter different vistas of the world, or denoting a precise time when things or materials change their physical qualities. Through this device, I disclose realms of envy, while seeking to immerse the reader in the lived experience of envy.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherUniversity of St Andrews
dc.subjectEnvyen_US
dc.subjectPottersen_US
dc.subjectAguabuena (Colombia)en_US
dc.subjectLocationsen_US
dc.subjectEntanglementsen_US
dc.subjectCraften_US
dc.subject.lccGN564.C7C2
dc.subject.lcshEnvy--Social aspects--Colombia--Ráquiraen_US
dc.subject.lcshPotters--Colombia--Ráquiraen_US
dc.subject.lcshEthnology--Colombia--Ráquiraen_US
dc.subject.lcshRáquira (Colombia)--Social life and customsen_US
dc.titleLocations of envy : an ethnography of Aguabuena pottersen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
dc.contributor.sponsorInstituto Colombiano de Antropologia e Historia ICANHen_US
dc.contributor.sponsorUniversity of St Andrews. Department of Social Anthropologyen_US
dc.contributor.sponsorOlivia Harris Prize-Radcliffe-Brown Trust-RAIen_US
dc.type.qualificationlevelDoctoralen_US
dc.type.qualificationnamePhD Doctor of Philosophyen_US
dc.publisher.institutionThe University of St Andrewsen_US
dc.publisher.departmentCentre of Amerindian Latin American and Caribbean Studies CASen_US


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