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Correction Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-07-11
Published in Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (Ahead of Print, 2024)
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From mestiço to white: refashioning racial identity in contemporary Brazil Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-05-20 Laura Rose Brylowski
The question of who is Black in Brazil has sparked controversial debate over the past three decades. Less frequently discussed, however, is ‘who is white?.’ Recently, new meanings behind racial cat...
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Embodying sound: body, territory, and community in the music of Mare Advertencia and Cynthia Montaño Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-05-20 Pilar Villanueva-Martinez
Rap and urban music have become increasingly relevant in the study of alternative practices of art, activism, and resistance in Latin America. This article examines how Mare Advertencia Lirika (Zap...
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A romance in (and with) the Amazon: constructing nature and Indigenous masculinities in Napo, Ecuador Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-05-17 Ernesto J. Benitez
The Ecuadorian Amazon attracts thousands of Western tourists yearly with promises of access to pristine rainforests and traditional Indigenous cultures. Visiting the Amazon is also billed as an opp...
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‘Until the land title is in my hands, the land is not sold!’: land, violence, and Indigenous survivance in Michoacán, Mexico Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-05-10 Luis Urrieta, Judith Landeros
In this article, we use a settler capitalism framework that centers racialized gender violence in the pueblo of San Miguel Nocutzepo. We tell a story about how neoliberal policy in Mexico permitted...
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Race, place, and the politics of land: agrarian dimensions of environmental justice Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-04-29 Michael M. Cary
Published in Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (Ahead of Print, 2024)
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Violencias, discriminaciones y experiencias políticas entrecruzadas. Una aproximación parcial al caso de personas negras y afrodescendientes disidentes del orden de género y de la heteronormatividad en Colombia Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 Franklin Gil Hernández
Published in Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (Vol. 19, No. 2, 2024)
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Las políticas indígenas en los albores de la república chilena: liberalismo, araucanización y desarticulación de los pueblos de indios (1813–1854) Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-01-31 Tomás Catepillán Tessi
Este artículo tiene por objetivo comprender las políticas implementadas tempranamente por la república chilena para ciudadanizar a los indígenas del período colonial que vivían en el Chile históric...
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White supremacy, settler angst, and Latine immigration to the US Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-01-24 Hector Amaya
Following the 2019 mass shooting in El Paso, Texas, this article examines the manifesto written by the perpetrator, Patrick Crusius. I use critical discourse analysis to reveal some of the racial c...
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The Afro-Latin American Negritud Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 Carlos Alberto Valderrama Rentería
By focusing on the case of Colombia, this article explains how influential the Négritude movements was on the Afro-Latin American politics during the 1970s. Scholars tend to highlight its cultural ...
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Sobrevivientes: testimonial literature, Haitian migrants, and Mexico’s racial imagination Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-01-18 Adolfo Bejar Lara
Since 2010, Haitian migration to non-traditional destinations such as Brazil and Chile intensified. After a series of shifts in Brazilian and Chilean immigration policies that restricted and crimin...
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Indigenous borders: contesting the nation-state, belonging and racialization Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-01-15 Jeffrey A. Gardner, Sarah D. Warren
Published in Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (Vol. 19, No. 1, 2024)
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Tx’otx’ and la defensa del territorio: articulating Mam territory as an Indigenous cross-border nation Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-01-15 Jeffrey A. Gardner
This article examines the way the Maya-Mam, an Indigenous people divided by the Guatemala–Mexico border, define territory in relation to and across state borders. As state borders geographically, s...
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Transnational indigenous identities Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-01-15 Kellen DeAlba
Published in Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (Vol. 19, No. 1, 2024)
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(Un)becoming indio: situating the meaning of the term ‘indio’ in the Dominican Republic Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2024-01-08 Eva Michelle Wheeler
Dominican use of the Spanish term indio to describe skin color and Black-white1 mixture has sparked debates in academic and social spheres for decades. Despite vehement (inter)national opposition, ...
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Más allá del cine indígena: hacia un cine de la reexistencia maya en Yucatán Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-12-12 Tamara Moya Jorge
Cuando se estudia el cine realizado por personas de los distintos pueblos originarios mexicanos, a menudo se hace referencia a las iniciativas gubernamentales que desde la década de los años 90 del...
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Beyond borderlines and ‘bordertowns’: political boundaries and indigeneity in the Americas Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-08-29 José Antonio Lucero
Borders are sites of violence and technologies of colonial control. They are also crucibles for the creation of new subjectivities. In this essay, I provide three glances on border violence and the...
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‘In defense of the people of color of South America’: a new source for twentieth-century Afro-Argentine history and thought Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-08-16 Paulina L. Alberto, Lea Geler, Chisu Teresa Ko
Buenos Aires’ robust Afrodescendant press in the late nineteenth century has allowed scholars to reconstruct Afro-Argentine thought and associational life during a nation-building process aimed at ...
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Indigenous sovereignty and Tohono O’odham efforts to impact U.S.-Mexico border security Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-08-13 Kenneth D. Madsen
As national demands for security came to override the concerns of border communities more decisively in recent decades, local input in areas such as land use, the environment, and civil rights has ...
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After racial democracy? The state’s rhetorical reconstruction of national identity in Brazil (1990–2019) Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-08-01 Ned Littlefield
The weakening of ‘racial democracy,’ or the idea of Brazil as a color-blind society that was central to what being Brazilian meant throughout much of the 20th century, raises a question about how t...
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Alimentando la ciudad y resistiéndola: los pueblos indígenas en el complejo urbano transfronterizo entre Brasil, Colombia y Perú en la Amazonía Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-07-18 Jorge Aponte Motta, Allison Rojas Correal, Taciana de Carvalho Coutinho
La Amazonia se divide entre nueve países. Sin embargo, las fronteras políticas no dividen los ecosistemas ni los habitantes de la región, pese a los innegables efectos regulatorios, la incidencia e...
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Between negotiation and confrontation in Ecuador: the re-emergence of CONAIE during Lenin Moreno’s presidency in light of resource mobilization theory Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-07-04 Alexandra Jima-González, Miguel Paradela-López
During President Rafael Correa’s term, Ecuador’s most relevant indigenous organization, CONAIE, entered a legitimacy crisis that severely weakened its representativeness. However, in October 2019, ...
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Race and the shantytown in a race-less country: negros villeros, whiteness and urban space in Argentina Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-27 Ignacio Aguiló, Ana Vivaldi
In this article, we look at the racialization of the people living in precarious and informal urbanizations known as villas in Argentina. In a country traditionally defined by narratives of whitene...
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Defending Ñöñhö identity and survival through festival performances and the affirmation of local cultural sovereignty in Querétaro, Mexico Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-27 Milvet Alonso
The festivals of San Miguel in the municipality of Tolimán, performed by the Ñöñhö (Otomí) indigenous community of the Querétaro Mexican state, include different celebrations. This article focuses ...
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Racialization in Wallmapu: contemporary perceptions of the ‘Mapuche threat’ Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-16 Claudia Briones, Patricio Lepe-Carrión
Throughout this article, we make three arguments. First, the post-dictatorship construction of the nation-state in Chile and Argentina has socially legitimized various ways of framing and invoking ...
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Chasing racists, protecting racism: revisiting anti-discrimination law in Colombia Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-12 Dario Hernán Vásquez Padilla
While some scholars have acknowledged that multiculturalism constitutes a rhetoric of denial of racism, few scholarly studies have empirically scrutinized how multiculturalist states utilize, legit...
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‘Was I an indio?’ Ambivalent self-ascriptions, gatherings and scatterings in the trajectory of a Ranquel man in central Argentina Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-06-07 Antonela dos Santos
This article presents Eugenio’s life story, which begins with his youth in the 1940s as a puestero ‘among the Indians’ in western La Pampa (Argentina). The narrative traces his migration to the cit...
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La interseccionalidad de la juventud afrodescendiente en Colombia: narrativas a partir de una investigación acción participativa juvenil Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-04-21 Pilar Mendoza, Maryluz Hoyos Ensucho, Jose E. Preciado Quiñones, Anyi Yicel Mosquera
Utilizando la metodología de investigación acción participativa juvenil (IAPJ), las facilitadoras de este trabajo colaboraron con dos jóvenes afrodescendientes colombianos en el desarrollo de este ...
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Producción Científica sobre la ‘interseccionalidad’ y su conceptualización en el ámbito hispanohablante: una revisión del perfil de los productores académicos en Hispanoamérica y España 30 años después de la acuñación Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-02-21 Mayte Cantero-Sánchez, Catalina Ramírez González
El concepto de ‘interseccionalidad,’ acuñado por la jurista afrodescendiente Kimberlé Crenshaw en 1989, ha sido ampliamente utilizado en múltiples contextos y disciplinas, trascendiendo el ámbito d...
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Sovereignty, freedom, and the problem of blackness in Jamaica Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-02-07 Maziki Thame
ABSTRACT Within the pursuit of black freedom, this article is concerned with the everyday experiences of the black poor in 21st Century Jamaica. I refer to both this experience and its potential politics as organic blackness. I locate this notion in relation to the coloniality of power in the postcolonial state and to creole nationalism which brought Jamaica to independence. I argue that colonial power
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Juan José Nieto Gil, artistic practices and the genealogy of coloniality in Colombia Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-01-24 Ada Margarita Ariza Aguilar
ABSTRACT As an artistic intervention, the exhibit ¿Suficientemente Negro? (Black Enough?) critically examines ‘whiteness’ and ‘racialization’ in Colombia. With the purpose of analyzing their impact on the figure of President Juan José Nieto Gil (1804–1866), this exhibit and consequently this article reveal the colonial cultural constructions that worked to whiten, conceal, and erase his image and legacy
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Staging indianización/staging indigenismo: artistic expression, representation of the ‘Indian’ and the inter-American indigenista movement Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-01-16 Laura Giraudo, Emilio J. Gallardo-Saborido
ABSTRACT This special issue—‘Indigenismo on Stage: Artistic Expression and the Inter-American Indigenista Movement in the Mid-Twentieth Century’—aims to present the staging of indigenismo by analyzing its ‘indianizing’ side. The process we call ‘indianization’ consists of promoting the recognition of indigenous cultural and especially artistic ‘specificities’, as determined by the inter-American indigenismo
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Indigenous autonomy and Latin American state security in contexts of criminal violence: the cases of Cauca in Colombia and Guerrero in Mexico Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-01-08 Shannan Mattiace, Carla Alberti
Scholars writing on Indigenous autonomy in the Americas have focused mainly on social movement demands and on the implementation of laws that enshrine autonomy rights. The motives of state officia...
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Imaginaries of Abya Yala: Indigenous filmmaking in Latin America from a multimodal semiotic perspective Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2023-01-06 Peter Baker
ABSTRACT This article argues that multimodal semiotics can provide an analytical lens to critically understand recent film and media production by Indigenous people and communities in southern and central Abya Yala (or Latin America). It suggests precise ways to analyse this film and media production as the emergence of alternative public or ‘counter-public’ spaces that allow for the expression of
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Erasing race in the migration waves from the northern triangle: the Guatemala case Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-12-20 Irma A. Velásquez Nimatuj
ABSTRACT This text is a copyedited version of the 13 September 2019 presentation the author made at the conference of the Ethnicity, Race, and Indigenous Peoples (ERIP, a section of the Latin American Studies Association [LASA]), which took place at Gonzaga University, in the state of Washington, in the U.S.
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Black women’s geographies of resistance and the Afro-Ecuadorian Ancestral Territory of Imbabura and Carchi Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-12-20 Beatriz Juárez Rodríguez
This article explores the political project of the Afro-Ecuadorian Ancestral Territory of Imbabura and Carchi, advanced by the members of the Coordinadora Nacional de Mujeres Negras del Ecuador (CO...
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Correction Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-12-13
Published in Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (Ahead of Print, 2022)
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Defying settler colonial logics: transborder territories and Indigenous Man Women seeking justice for gendered violence Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-12-02 Lynn Stephen
ABSTRACT Indigenous Guatemalan refugees passing through Mexico to seek asylum in the U.S. move in the space of a larger transborder territory created over the past six decades in response to U.S. foreign policy in Central America, historical patterns of labor movement and retreat from violence in the region. I frame this larger territory within the larger settler colonial politics of dispossession
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“The guy is blind but appears normal according to diagnostic parameters”: a reflection on racism, whiteness, and the ‘neutrality’ of technology in the biomedical field in Brazil Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-10-04 Tatiane Muniz
ABSTRACT Rejected a priori in the biomedical field as a category that has no meaning for clinical practice, race maintains an absent presence that spans techno-scientific productions and the daily practices of health professionals. Race constitutes a type of infrastructure that is rarely treated critically and that can be given as supporting evidence in scientific practices. It appears as an unexpected
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Indigenous tradition, change, and uncertainty in western Honduras: how Lenca potters maintain craft production livelihoods in the face of socioeconomic development Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-10-01 Hannah Toombs
ABSTRACT For the indigenous Lenca people of western Honduras, pottery production represents an economically and spiritually important tradition. Historically exchanged in regional trade networks, pottery is still produced today. However, this tradition is changing due to socioeconomic and political development. Lenca pottery has shifted from utilitarian wares to more aesthetic pieces favored by tourists
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Intergenerational transmission of ancestry information in a mid-size city in Argentina Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-09-27 Marcela Mendoza, Bárbara Mazza, Graciela S. Cabana, Lindsay Smith, Francisco Di Fabio Rocca, Hugo Delfino, Carla Martínez
ABSTRACT We examined the self-reported family trees of 288 adult Argentines from a mid-size city near Buenos Aires to evaluate how intergenerational transmission of ancestry information matched (or not) anonymized estimates of continental-level genetic ancestry. Intergenerational transmission of ancestry information was inferred from the content of the anonymized family trees, and continental-level
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A conceptual roadmap for the study of whiteness in Latin America Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-09-12 Hugo Ceron-Anaya, Patricia de Santana Pinho, Ana Ramos-Zayas
ABSTRACT This introductory essay outlines and contributes to fulfill the major goals of this special issue: 1) The examination of whiteness in Latin America in its articulation with broader social hierarchies, and 2) The development of a conceptual and theoretical roadmap for the study of whiteness in the region. The essay is divided into five substantive sections through which we develop our main
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Settler colonialism in Latin American and Native studies Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-08-30 Lynn Stephen
Published in Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (Ahead of Print, 2022)
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Democracy against the grain: indigenous politics in Colombia’s southwest Andes Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-08-09 Mónica L. Espinosa Arango
ABSTRACT This article examines the southwest Colombian Andes indigenous peoples’ active participation as ‘demos’ in Colombia´s modern polity and democratic politics. Despite a long-term pattern of nonrecognition, their ‘against-the-grain democracy’ emerges from sedimented experiences of collectivism and intercultural experimentalism. The resulting indigenous politics expands the horizon of commonality
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White criadas and the ‘servant crisis’ in pre-abolition Rio de Janeiro Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Sonia Roncador
ABSTRACT This article interrogates the problematic relation of whiteness and servitude in mid to late-nineteenth-century Rio de Janeiro, when a fast-growing number of Portuguese female migrants, mostly from the Azorean islands, sought employment in households where domestic service had been hitherto associated with black slavery. As I argue, the accounts of elite domestic lives in popular print cultures
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‘We’re a bit browner but we still belong to the white race’: making whiteness in the context of South-South migration in Chile Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-18 Macarena Bonhomme
ABSTRACT In the context of rising South-South migration to Chile, this article examines how Chileans redefine and claim whiteness in a multicultural working-class neighborhood in Santiago. It contributes to regional racial studies by analyzing how whiteness is constructed in multicultural neighborhoods where different national and racialized identities that share a colonial past converge, and where
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White spatial politics in mainstream agroecology activism in Argentina Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-12 Daniela Ayelén Marini
ABSTRACT This paper addresses whiteness in environmental imaginaries underpinning mainstream agroecology activism in Argentina. It examines the cultural politics of race and nature articulated by intellectual leaders during the period of nation-making, and by contemporary agroecology advocates who are preoccupied to define appropriate human-land relations. Empirically, it mostly focuses on an activist
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Privileged whites and white privilege in Puerto Rico Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-07-11 Guillermo Rebollo Gil
ABSTRACT Ascribed exclusively to the wealthy, white privilege is often understood and explained in Puerto Rico as a localized phenomenon, confined to select geographies, social circles, habits of thought, and action. This paper problematizes this notion by first highlighting the social significance of elite whites, commonly referred to as blanquitos, and then exploring some of the ways in which white
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Artists, folklorists, and cultural institutions in Ecuador (1944–1964) Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-06-27 María Elena Bedoya Hidalgo
ABSTRACT This article explores the relationship between art, folklore, and cultural institutions in mid-twentieth-century Ecuador. The founding of the Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana (CCE) in 1944 represented a milestone in the construction of the idea of ‘national culture’. It generated a cultural policy that recognized indigeneity as the foundation of Ecuadorian identity. The artists of the time took
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The figure of the ‘Indian’ in 1920s Bolivian theater Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-06-13 Emilio J. Gallardo-Saborido
ABSTRACT This article examines the treatment of the figure of the ‘Indian’ in the Bolivian theater of the 1920s. It opens up with a presentation of the theatrical work of Bolivia’s generación del 21. The selected corpus is then read as a set of texts that discuss the intersections between the notions of the ‘Bolivian nation’ and ‘indigeneity,’ two key elements in the intellectual debates of early 20th
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Art, folklore, and industry: popular arts and indigenismo in Mexico, 1920–1946 Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-05-18 Haydeé López Hernández
ABSTRACT The construction of popular arts in Mexico is a process that is generally attributed to the proposals of the plastic artists of the post-revolutionary period. Here, I explore some of these (Exposición Nacional de Artes Populares, 1921; y Museo de Artes Populares, 1930–1942), along with others not yet analyzed by historiography, mainly developed by anthropologists (at the Museo Nacional, 1920–1924;
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In the shadow of Cuauhtémoc: commemorative sculptures, indigenous heroes, and indigenismo in Mexico and Brazil, 1944-1958 Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-04-28 Laura Giraudo
ABSTRACT This article addresses the Brazilian interpretation of the Day of the Indian, a hemispheric indigenista celebration created in 1940 and observed in Brazil since 1944. It especially focuses on the prominence of the figure of Cuauhtémoc after the Mexican government sent a monument of the ‘Aztec hero’ to Brazil in 1922. The arrival of the Cuauhtémoc monument in Rio de Janeiro triggered a debate
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Yuyarinchik ninchik: un diálogo colectivo sobre arte indígena e indigenismos Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-04-19 Angélica Alomoto, María Elena Bedoya, Elvira Espejo, José Luis Macas, Alberto Muenala
ABSTRACT Artists Angélica Alomoto, Elvira Espejo and Alberto Muenala shared with María Elena Bedoya and José Luis Macas their artistic experiences and the complexities of their artistic practices in the field of art and in cultural institutions in Ecuador and Bolivia. This is only a fragment of a long collective conversation we had in the context of the pandemic of COVID 19. We would like to clarify
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Unveiling Latin American White multiculturalism: Black women’s politics in Argentina and Costa Rica Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-03-29 Prisca Gayles, Marianela Muñoz-Muñoz
ABSTRACT This article proposes theoretical and methodological approaches to researching Whiteness in two countries that embraced Whiteness over mestizaje and adopted ‘late multiculturalism’: Costa Rica and Argentina. We situate our analysis within critical race and Black feminist frameworks, which argue that the construction of White identity cannot exist without the construction of racialized others
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‘Real Bahamians’ and ‘paper Bahamians’: Haitians as perpetual foreigners Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-03-28 Charmane M. Perry
ABSTRACT In the Bahamas, children born to undocumented migrants grow up without citizenship but are entitled to apply for it upon their eighteenth birthday. However, due to the stigma of having Haitian origin, Bahamians of Haitian descent continue to be othered racially and ethnically even after eventually becoming Bahamian citizens. In this essay, I argue that second-generation Haitian Bahamians are
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América Indígena and inter-American visual indigenismo, 1941–1951 Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Deborah Dorotinsky
ABSTRACT This article focuses on the visual imagery within the journal América Indígena published by the Inter-American Indigenist Institute (IAII). I analyze how the images published there operate as symbolic capital in the formation of an indigenista visual culture. I hold that the images published by the IAII’s journal significantly contributed to the consolidation of an indigenista discourse and
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Interrogating the constitutive silences of whiteness: racial categorizations and spatial racialization in Argentina Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-03-07 María V. Barbero
ABSTRACT This article interrogates the role of silence in Argentine ‘racial grammar.’ Drawing from ethnographic fieldwork on youth migration in Buenos Aires, as well as a case study analysis of a state-sponsored anti-racism campaign, it analyzes how silences and silencing mechanisms serve to (re)produce the naturalization of whiteness in Argentina despite recent challenges. Specifically, it analyzes
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Little Wynwood: whiteness, tourism, and gentrification in Havana’s San Isidro neighborhood Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-02-28 Maile Speakman
ABSTRACT Through an analysis of an Airbnb Experience called ‘Paint a graffiti with Havana Street Art’ in San Isidro, a majority non-white and economically marginalized neighborhood in the southern part of Havana’s colonial city, I interrogate how whiteness is transforming San Isidro in the image of Wynwood, Miami. I do so by tracing the mobility and barriers to movement of international graffiti artists
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La salud intercultural en Toñampare contada desde el desencuentro dialógico de saberes Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-02-10 Marco Arturo Valladares Villagómez, Gabriela Estefania Duque Orozco, Paulina Elizabeth Oña Quillupangui
ABSTRACT Este artículo busca presentar el estado actual del diálogo de saberes sobre salud intercultural entre el sistema de salud público presente en el territorio waorani del Ecuador y la población originaria, principalmente de los sabios conocidos como pikenani. Desde un enfoque cualitativo de investigación-acción participativa se facilitaron procesos metodológicos de reflexión que dieron como resultado
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Disrupting the silence: whiteness, power, and national imaginaries in Latin America Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2022-02-09 Roosbelinda Cárdenas
Published in Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies (Vol. 18, No. 2, 2023)