• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Ontological excess and metonymy in early-modern descriptions of Brazil : an amodern para-scientific approach to nature
  • Contributor: Zir, Alessandro [VerfasserIn]
  • imprint: [2020]
  • Published in: Marburg journal of religion ; 22(2020), 2, Seite 1-19
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.17192/mjr.2020.22.8297
  • ISSN: 1612-2941
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: Portugal > Kolonialismus > Brasilien > Beschreibung > Metonymie > Wissenschaftlichkeit
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: This essay relies on and furthers a hypothesis advanced in previous research: that the well-known eccentricities to be found in the early-modern corpus of the Portuguese colonizers of Brazil—its references to entities like monsters and demons, its bizarre descriptions, and odd classification systems—can be explained in view of a certain style of thinking, addressing a specific ontological concern. Ontology emerges here as a structural differentiating factor between radically distinct kinds of approach to reality, and the notions of excess and metonymy help us to characterize the specificity of a cognitive enterprise which, in its several manifestations, is literary-religious rather than scientific-empirical. Our perspective tends to challenge communicative models trying to address the difference between religious and scientific discourses merely on the level of the content and truth-values of their belief systems. Moreover it covers significantly visual culture, which helps us to present Brazilian colonial literature on a broad canvas. This paper is one of a collection that originated in the IAHR Special Conference “Religions, Science and Technology in Cultural Contexts: Dynamics of Change”, held at The Norwegian University of Science and Technology on March 1-2, 2012. For an overall introduction see the article by Ulrika Mårtensson, also published here.
  • Access State: Open Access