This paper delves into the central role of ethics, particularly the discussions about its limits, within the daily life of the inhabitants of La Victoria. Faced with the everyday uncertainty that comes from the different possible courses of action, opinion and decision, pobladores have developed a source of strength that is rooted in their social interactions and that allows them to sustain their convictions – or ethical limits – through time. This strength is referred to by pobladores, in their own conversations, as ‘control’. In this paper I describe the source and main characteristics of control, in order to finally show how the recognition of control in others constitutes a way in which different groups can converge around shared ethical distinctions.
Briceño, P. (2016). Ethics, Control and Recognition in the Everyday Life of Población La Victoria’s Inhabitants (Santiago, Chile). Revista Chilena De Antropología, (33). Retrieved from https://revistadeantropologia.uchile.cl/index.php/RCA/article/view/43386