TY - JOUR
T1 - El encuentro con dios. La conversión de aymaras al pentecostalismo en contextos de pluralismo médico
AU - Rivera, Carlos Piñones
AU - Mansilla, Miguel Ángel
AU - Del Solar, Rodrigo Galdames
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright: Revista © 2018 de CSIC. Dialectología Este es y Tradiciones un artículoPopulares, de acceso vol. abierto LXXIII, n. distribuido o 2, pp. 525-545, bajojulio-diciembre los términos2018, de la licencia de uso y distribuciónISSN: Creative 0034-7981, Commons eISSN: Reconocimiento 1988-8457, https://doi.org/10.3989/rdtp.2018.02.012 4.0 Internacional (CC BY 4.0).
PY - 2018/12
Y1 - 2018/12
N2 - This article discusses our analysis of the experience of conversion to Pentecostalism in a context of medical pluralism in Chile. We rely on testimonies obtained from an ethnography with Aymara farmers in the town of Camiña (Tarapacá, Chile), from which we analyze religious conversion as a contextualized process in the dispute over the hegemony of local medical knowledge. We highlight the experience of the encounter with God which, from our theoretical perspective, is a central element in the process of production of ideological certainties. We conclude by questioning the definitions of conversion based on the idea of a mere rupture, to define it as a process of displacement of the hegemonic principle in the medical knowledge inherent in medical pluralism. Conversion would entail a process of interpellation which, while articulating non-Pentecostal identity elements, requires the production of an identity of rupture, generating an identity position in conflict with Andean common sense. We emphasize that this positioning does not cancel out the efficacy of Andean medical knowledge within the health-illness-care process, but does negativize it under the label of idolatry.
AB - This article discusses our analysis of the experience of conversion to Pentecostalism in a context of medical pluralism in Chile. We rely on testimonies obtained from an ethnography with Aymara farmers in the town of Camiña (Tarapacá, Chile), from which we analyze religious conversion as a contextualized process in the dispute over the hegemony of local medical knowledge. We highlight the experience of the encounter with God which, from our theoretical perspective, is a central element in the process of production of ideological certainties. We conclude by questioning the definitions of conversion based on the idea of a mere rupture, to define it as a process of displacement of the hegemonic principle in the medical knowledge inherent in medical pluralism. Conversion would entail a process of interpellation which, while articulating non-Pentecostal identity elements, requires the production of an identity of rupture, generating an identity position in conflict with Andean common sense. We emphasize that this positioning does not cancel out the efficacy of Andean medical knowledge within the health-illness-care process, but does negativize it under the label of idolatry.
KW - Aymaras
KW - Medical Pluralism
KW - Pentecostalism
KW - Religious Conversion
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85068011594
U2 - 10.3989/rdtp.2018.02.012
DO - 10.3989/rdtp.2018.02.012
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85068011594
SN - 0034-7981
VL - 73
SP - 525
EP - 545
JO - Revista de Dialectologia y Tradiciones Populares
JF - Revista de Dialectologia y Tradiciones Populares
IS - 2
ER -