Part of a series on |
Anthropology |
---|
This article may be too technical for most readers to understand.(June 2022) |
Political ontology is an approach within anthropology to understand the process of how practices, entities (human and non-human), and concepts come into being or are enacted.[1] The field takes as its focus 'conflicts involving different assumptions about 'what exists,'"[1] over metaphysical entities, how to understand ecosystems and environment, the nature of animals and plants, and how communities collectively adjudicate what is real. Political ontology emerged as part of the ontological turn, particularly in the works by Mario Blaser, Marisol de la Cadena and Eduardo Viveiros de Castro.