O efeito mais que etnográfico: Literatura como retomada, autoria e ativismo de mulheres indígenas
Resumen
This study was financed in part by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível
Superior - Brasil (CAPES) - Finance Code 001 and it consists of an ethnography of the
complete works of two Brazilian indigenous female writers, whose publications have
strengthened the historical struggle of indigenous peoples in Brazil. Seeking to demonstrate
that contemporary indigenous literature is an extension of indigenous cosmopolitics, the
aesthetic, political, and politicizing character of each publication is discussed. By bringing
together concepts central to anthropology and literary studies, it is evident that the writing of
Eliane Potiguara and Márcia Wayna Kambeba-Omágua traverses bodies and territories in a
movement that updates and reaffirms indigenous onto-epistemic diversity in Brazil and Latin
America. By bringing indigenous and non-indigenous worlds into relation, this literature
acknowledges conflict and alterity as something that manifests between partially connected
worlds. In their testimonial, autobiographical, and auto ethnographical aspects, Potiguara and
Kambeba's publications delineate indigenous cosmologies onto literature and develop
decolonizing epistemologies. As part of indigenous activism, this literature has demonstrated
itself as a reclaiming, activism, and authorship in a writing that reverberates worlds and their
human and non-human constituents.
Colecciones
El ítem tiene asociados los siguientes ficheros de licencia: