DECOLONIZATION AND THE QUESTION OF SUBJECTIVITY
2007; Routledge; Volume: 21; Issue: 2-3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/09502380601162555
ISSN1466-4348
Autores Tópico(s)Latin American Cultural Politics
ResumoThe construction and performance of gender and gender relations has been paramount to the process of Decolonization. Gender has permeated the discourses and enactments of colonization and is an inseparable part of the casting of subjectivity through the coloniality of power. The notions of femininity and masculinity are themselves colonial constructs that have pressed more complex notions of gender, sexuality, and desire into a binary. The treatment of gender in three approaches to decolonization (Nelly Richard Richard , Nelly (1996) 'Feminismo, Experiencia y Representación' . Revista Iberoamericana , vol. 62 , pp. (176–177) : 733 – 744 .[Crossref] , [Google Scholar]'s cultural theory, Mujeres Creando's lesbian Monasterios , Elizabeth , ed. (2006) Tecnocracia de género y feminismo autónomo: Mujeres Creando . La Paz : Plural . [Google Scholar] street Street , Brian V. (1984) Literacy in Theory and Practice . Cambridge, , London, New York, New Rochelle, Melbourne, Sydney : Cambridge University Press . [Google Scholar] performance, indigenous movement's written and audiovisual discourse) help to discern how gender and the coloniality of power are articulated and in how far these efforts at decolonization unwork colonial legacies. Richard challenges the geopolitics of knowledge. As she claims the specificity of Latin American heterogeneity as a place from which to theorize she also guards against essentialist notions of gender. The conflicts Harris , Olivia (1978) 'Complementarity and conflict: An Andean view of women and men' , in: Sex and age as principles of social differentiation , ed. J. La Fontaine , ASA 17 , London : Academic Press . [Google Scholar] underlying gender heterogeneity, however, are glossed over. The discourses of indigenous movements debate concepts of gender complementarity while, at the same time, using gender complementarity as a template for thinking decolonized relations. Yet, gender here remains caught in the Andean paradigm of duality. Mujeres Creando call attention to the conflicts underlying heterogeneity without essentializing notions of woman and man. Rather, their performances, publications and graffitties challenge the idea of gender binaries as they expose lingering racial and gender imaginaries that connect with state power and NGO solidarity. Their performances, however, remain isolated from the networks of decolonization that indigenous movements have established and run the risk of turning into a shock commodity.
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