New and ancentral habit-abilities: The Guarani-Mbyá village of Pará Roké (Brazil)

By Maria Paula Prates
This short film addresses the experiences of the coloniality of the Anthropocene. Pará Roké is a dreamed teko’a (Mbyá existencial spaces). Yva literally dreamed it. She was told through a dream that her family’s new teko’a would be near the sea, in far south Brazil. Pará Roké was for years a place for agribusiness research and currently the ruins of FEPAGRO’s buildings share the space with traditional Mbyá houses and swiddens.
Maria Paula Prates is a social anthropologist working on health, illness and care subjects and interested in conceptions of person, body, health, life, and care relations. (Re)productive health and the Anthropocene, including midwifery knowledge(s), the medicalisation of childbirth and its connections to environmental devastation, as well as pollution, toxicities, and obstetric and environmental racism, are at the core of her current research themes. She joined the UCL Department of Anthropology to work as a Research Fellow in Medical Anthropology of the Anthropocene for the EIA project in 2021. Currently, she is a Collaborating Professor at the Postgraduate Programme of Social Anthropology at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (PPGAS/UFRGS) and a Research Affiliate at the School of Anthropology & Museum Ethnography (SAME) at the University of Oxford.

Learning points

  • How do we build habit-abilities within the Anthropocene?
  • In what way and in what social configurations can Indigenous peoples live with the ruins of colonial legacy?
  • What are the possibilities of engaging with contracolonizacao (Nego Bispo, 2023) processes?