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9781531510053 Academic Inspection Copy

Reconocimientos

A Memoir of Becoming
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What is the relationship between a writer's life, milieu, and thought? In this daring and intellectually expansive text, part memoir and part political philosophy, the anthropologist Rafael Sanchez explores the forces and events that shaped him and the nations through which he moved. Reconocimientos is a book of both personal and political reckoning, from the thrillingly emancipatory possibilities of Venezuela's plazas to the political promise and disappointments of revolution. Written in the final year of his life, Reconocimientos moves from scenes of Sanchez's youth in Cuba to fieldwork on the cult of Maria Lionza in Venezuela to confront the terrifying and alluring forces of patriarchal privilege at the base of monumentalist authoritarianism. Sanchez's intimate prose speaks with the urgency both of his own mortality and of the political crises of our moment. Amid the resurgence of patriarchy, hierarchy, and the valorization of inequality that have become pillars of populist movements in Latin America and beyond, Sanchez finds a residual radical possibility in 'horizontal' spaces, where the forces of mimesis permit manifold transformations.
Luis Perez-Oramas (Afterword By) Luis Perez-Oramas is a Venezuelan poet, art historian and curator. He is the author of eleven volumes of poetry and numerous catalogue texts and critical essays. In 2011, he was Curatorial Director of the Sao Paolo Biennale. From 2006 to 2017, he was Latin American Art Curator at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Claudio Lomnitz (Afterword By) Claudio Lomnitz is Campbell Family Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University. He is the author, most recently, of Nuestra America: My Family in the Vertigo of Translation (2021). Rafael Sanchez (Author) Rafael Sanchez (1950-2024) was senior lecturer at the Geneva Graduate Institute. He is the author of Dancing Jacobins: A Venezuelan Genealogy of Latin American Populism (Fordham, 2016). Rosalind C. Morris (Edited By) Rosalind C. Morris is Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University. Her most recent books are Unstable Ground: The Lives, Deaths, and Afterlives of Gold in South Africa (Columbia, 2025) and, with William Kentridge, Accounts and Drawings from Underground (rev. ed., Seagull, 2021). Her most recent film is the documentary We are Zama Zama (2021). Igor Barreto (Foreword By) Igor Barreto is a Venezuelan poet, editor and translator. He has been Director of Publications at the Museo Jacobo Borges in Caracas, Director of the Cinemateca Nacional, Director of Collections of the Fundacion de Etnomusicologia y Folklore, and Director of Imprenta Anauco.
Introduction Rosalind C. Morris 1 A Note on the Text 13 Reconocimientos: A Memoir of Becoming 17 The Three Squares: Being, Having Been, Being Another Luis Perez- Oramas 111 Afterword Claudio Lomnitz 117 Notes 123
A singular text, a kind of Latin American cross between Montaigne and Malinowski, in which an anthropologist discovers in his own biography a key to understanding the collective history of a continent.---Claudio Lomnitz, from the Afterword An essay of incredible originality, a work of passional reason by a writer with a wonderful poetic sensibility.---Charles Hirschkind, University of California, Berkeley In this uniquely moving, genre-bending book, Sanchez confronts patriarchal authority as it has imposed itself on his life and dissolves it into the collective, radically democratic powers of the Venezuelan crowd.---Rihan Yeh, University of California, San Diego In Caracas, Rafael Sanchez witnessed a transformative scene that led to his groundbreaking theory of the state. This stunning memoir of the intersection of politics and personal life narrates his rejection of patriarchy and his growing understanding of the complexities and limits of emancipatory politics. A loving and living anthropology of an eccentric life, Reconocimientos is a testament to the transformative power of becoming.---Javier Guerrero, Princeton University
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