Alterable Geographies

Author:

Winchell Mareike

Abstract

Abstract Like plantation slavery, Indigenous servitude on Bolivian haciendas raises crucial questions about the afterlives of colonial subjection. Engaging questions of colonialism, unfreedom, and emancipation across the Americas, this article examines how Quechua Bolivians remake landscapes defined by continued material traces of subjection and abiding racial inequalities. Rather than inhabiting this landscape as one of passive historical repetition, Quechua Bolivians use narratives and spatial practices to alter landscapes—including elderberry trees where kin were whipped, high mountain lakes constructed by forced laboring kin, and ravines and valley crevices that offered routes of escape from indentured labor and political violence. Such practices point to a politics of lo abigarrado (the motley), a term used to describe people whose labor itineraries and affective attachments have not been constrained by the frames of Mestizo citizenship and timeless Indigenous rootedness to place. Through this spatial poetics, Quechua families thwart nationalist paradigms of propertied redress to forge alternate plotlines of emancipation based on keeping time, and places, open to the demands of a violent past.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

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Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Masculinity's (mis)fortune: Historicizing affect as extractivist infrastructure in Bolivian sodalite mining;The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology;2024-09-10

2. Unsettling extractivism: Indigeneity, race, and disruptive emplacements;The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology;2024-08-20

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