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Moving healing plants: Epidemic histories and networks of care along the Amazon river

Project description

Medicine and healing plants in the Amazon River

The Amazon River has influenced medicine and public health in South America. However, historical accounts are often fragmented by national borders or focus on specific diseases or institutions. With the support of the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions programme, the MovingHealingPlants project will investigate the networks of care that develop among humans, plants, and pathogens through the exchange of healing plants for the treatment of epidemic diseases. It will adopt a long-term perspective, spanning from colonial encounters to contemporary urbanisation in the Amazon River region, connecting Manaus (Brazil), Leticia (Colombia), and Iquitos (Peru). This innovative project will create a connected historical narrative of medicine and intercultural relationships focused on the movement and transformation of healing plants.

Objective

Epidemics involve the circulation not only of pathogens, animals and people, but also of healing plants. In a highly innovative approach, MovingHealingPlants explores human-plant-pathogen networks of care emerging in the exchange of healing plants used for epidemic diseases. The project engages a longue durée timeframe from colonial encounters to current urbanisation processes in Amazonia, and extends along the Amazon river axis connecting contemporary Amazonian cities of Manaus (Brazil), Leticia (Colombia) and Iquitos (Peru). With its headwaters in the Andes and flowing into the Atlantic coast, the highly navigated and populated Amazon river has been decisive in the history of medicine and public health in Amazonia and South America. Yet so far, historical accounts are fragmented into colonial or contemporary nation-states borders, or focus on specific diseases or institutions. This groundbreaking project proposes an interconnected fluvial account of the history of medicine and intercultural relationships of care, from the vantage point of the circulation and transformations of healing plants. Drawing from ethnobotany, global health, history, STS and anthropology, this project aims to assemble a history of epidemics and intercultural care in Amazonia, to explore cosmologies and technologies of plant transformations through ethnographic collaborative participatory approaches, and to produce a critical account of emergent networks and boundary dynamics in a field of Amazonian health simultaneously global and locally situated. MovingHealingPlants highlights the relationships Amazonian Indigenous people form with healing plants as persons, in a more-than-human cosmopolitics from where to rethink some of our most pressing anthropocenic predicaments: environmental destruction and urbanization, the emergence of infectious diseases, and the threats to Indigenous forest knowledge and modes of existing.

Fields of science (EuroSciVoc)

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Programme(s)

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Topic(s)

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Funding Scheme

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HORIZON-TMA-MSCA-PF-GF - HORIZON TMA MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowships - Global Fellowships

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Call for proposal

Procedure for inviting applicants to submit project proposals, with the aim of receiving EU funding.

(opens in new window) HORIZON-MSCA-2024-PF-01

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Coordinator

ALMA MATER STUDIORUM - UNIVERSITA DI BOLOGNA
Net EU contribution

Net EU financial contribution. The sum of money that the participant receives, deducted by the EU contribution to its linked third party. It considers the distribution of the EU financial contribution between direct beneficiaries of the project and other types of participants, like third-party participants.

€ 359 120,22
Address
VIA ZAMBONI 33
40126 Bologna
Italy

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Region
Nord-Est Emilia-Romagna Bologna
Activity type
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
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Total cost

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Partners (2)

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