Thinking about the visual anthropologically entails understanding the ways in which different peoples around the world have dealt with what images do –not always differentiated from writing–, as well as the place assigned to them in life and death, in culture and in nature. The resulting reflection inevitably leads to questioning the status of the human, and its concomitant transformation to the mutations of the visual, since the images are obtained by means of a machinic calculation. This second volume brings together some of the most important names in anthropology and image studies, as well as key figures in disciplines such as Egyptology or epistemology. Without exception, his work shows that the study of visuality cannot be done without crossing disciplines, fields and cultures. The set is a book that is sure to contribute to ongoing debates about the visual and the anthropological.