Astrid Cabral
Dina Ananco
Poetry Comparison
Indigenous Epistemology
Random
100

Where is Astrid Cabral from? 

Manaus

100

Where is Dina Ananco from?

Peru

100

Which author specifically explores the sustained and continuous essence/soul of plants, even after they have been transformed in structure to serve human needs/desires?

Cabral

"Cabral’s  poetry  emphasizes  the  multiple  plant  transformation  that  make  life and literary writing possible. In several texts she focuses on plant reification, i.e., its reduction  to  food  and  other  commodities  for  humans" (41).

100

Indigenous Amazonian worldviews recognize divinity as this, meaning it can be felt and experienced in the natural world

Tangible

100

What was the title of our article?

Phytopoiesis: Plants in Amazonian Women’s Poetry



200

This poem turns a simple breakfast into something almost satanic, giving plants human-like qualities and evoking a sense of guilt

Café da manhã (Breakfast)

200

What is the title of Ananco's poetry collection dedicated to her grandmother?

Sanchiu

200

Which author utilizes their poetry to critically engage with some of the patriarchal elements of their Indigenous culture?

Ananco

"The  poet  challenges  the  patriarchal  values  prevalent  in  some  quarters  of Wampis  and  Awajun  communities  (Pau  380)  and,  at  the  same  time,  highlights  the centrality  of  women  in  Indigenous  culture" (47). 

200

Both Cabral's and Ananco's poetry reflects this quality: the idea that all living things are fundamentally connected to one another

interconnectedness

200

What is the main argument of our critical article?

The author chooses two Amazonian poets and explores how their works depict Amazonian worldviews, ways of knowing and being, challenge anthropocentrism, and integrate feminist perspectives

300

In "Portal of the Day," oranges are described as having done this instead of staying on their branches

Emigrated from the trees

300

What is the name of Ananco's poem that was highlighted in her section of the presentation?

"Guardians of the Forest"

300

What is one similar device/strategy utilized by each of the poets that reflects Amazonian epistemology?

1. Both authors invoke female gendered spirits/deities/figures (Nunkui and Tskunki) to represent or illustrate women’s power and women’s relationship to the more-than-human world 

OR 2. Both authors use poetry to explore the world through plants’ perspective

300

A non-anthropocentric worldview, placing nature rather than humans at the center

Biocentrism / ecocentrism

300

What does "phytopoiesis" mean?

Poetry written on/about/with plants

400

This is the term used in the article to describe Cabral's portrayal of plants being reduced to food and other commodities for humans

Plant reification

400

What two languages does Ananco write her poetry in? 

Wampis (Indigenous language)

Spanish (translation)

400

How do the authors differ in their use of contemporary platforms to share, preserve, and disperse Indigenous ideas and culture?

Ananco specifically engages digital art and social media to enhance and share her poetry with a wider audience as one way of preserving and sharing Indigenous knowledge, while Cabral does not engage social media in the same way. 
400

Ananco uses these modern platforms to bridge oral Indigenous tradition with contemporary audiences, similar to the Siekopai Youth

Social media and photography

400

What are the names of the poems by Astrid Cabral that we read for class today?

River Dolphin in the Body

Everywhere in the River

Porto Seguro 1980

Ritual

500

What were some of the goals of Clube de Madrugada?

(Only have to guess one)

aesthetic innovations of Brazilian modernism 

persistent opposition between humans and the rainforest

500

What are three themes highlighted in Ananco's poetry? 

Interconnectedness

Ecocentrism

Plurality of identities

Superficiality of multiculturalism

Feminism

500

Both Cabral's "Breakfast" and Galeano's "Mesa" are written from the perspective of plants and objects being exploited by humans. What is the key difference in how each poem approaches this theme?

Cabral focuses on guilt and the human role in plant exploitation, while Galeano's table mourns its lost freedom, wishing it had been an animal that could have run away when the power saws arrived

500

Cabral and Ananco emphasize this quality of vegetal life in Amazonian existence, significant for both Indigenous and non-Indigenous cultures

Ubiquitous presence/centrality of plants

500
What does "pensamiento amazónico" mean?

It is a holistic perspective that emphasizes a relationship between nature, society, culture, and spirituality, and directly challenges Western thought.