Studi e ricerche

La velocidad en los mundos lentos

Accidentes, máquinas y sociedades en América del Sur

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open access | peer reviewed
    edited by
  • Nicolas Richard - CNRS - email
  • Diego Villar - Università Ca' Foscari Venezia - email
  • Alberto Preci - Sorbonne Université - email

Abstract
From trucks and bulldozers to smaller tools like chainsaws and electric generators, a massive influx of machinery is currently reshaping Latin America’s peripheral landscapes. This process of mechanical colonization introduces disruptive and often violent forms of acceleration that profoundly impact environments and societies. Drawing on anthropology, history, and geography, this volume analyzes mechanical accidents as critical events. These events are not random fatalities but reveal tensions between machines, territories, and societies, prompting a re-evaluation of concepts like materiality, agency and causality.

Keywords AsphaltTragedyMemoryAmazoniaHistoryAccidentsBeing-on-the-streetSulfur miningAyoreoProgressMixtecsNeo-wildlifePreventionSuicideTravel AccountsTechnological appropriationIndigenous peoplesMotorcycleChuquicamataExtractive industriesGran ChacoCapitalismRubber BoomNational identityStorytellingGuarani ethnographySpaces of memorySymbolsPressDraining machinesJujuyRoad anthropologyViolenceIndigenous perceptionMachinesCopper miningRoadsOral traditionBoliviaTechnologyChacoEaster IslandPotosíLafkenche societyInfrastructureHunter and gatherersAnimal tramplingExplosion mining capitalismImaginaryRoad accidentalityTrainsAddictionsMotorcyclesAnthropology of infrastructureWichíPowerAullagasTrain accidentMechanizationShipwrecksMapucheTransportationGovernment agenciesChileRoutesVolcanoesRhythmMiningCultureStateMachine-animal relationsIndigenous laborSpeedHistory of the ChacoIn-betweenHumahuaca, IturbeExtractivismAccidentWhalersDevelopment projects

Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-940-5 | e-ISBN 978-88-6969-940-5 | Published Sept. 30, 2025 | Language es