Zvipukanana: “Tiny Animals with No Bones”

Isis 115 (1):141-146 (2024)
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Abstract

Summoning insights from dzimbahwe cultures of knowing—specifically indigenous ways of seeing, thinking, knowing, and doing as archived in local languages—this essay will first argue that the word “insect” did not exist among the author’s ancestors before the colonial moment and is too light and narrow to account for their sciences and what they did with and through them. Second, it proposes indigenous concepts that more adequately capture meanings of and human actions toward flying, crawling, burrowing, and swimming tiny animals, possible through lived experience. Third, the author goes into and speaks through the language of his ancestors about their little animals without bones. He devotes the entire essay to just one type of boneless little animal—chifemanemusana (the one that breathes with its back)—drawing on both his ancestors’ and his own experiences with several zvifemanemusana (plural).

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