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The politics of tradition: Aboriginal nationalism and women. Mexico and Canada in comparative perspective.

机译:传统政治:土著民族主义和妇女。墨西哥和加拿大的比较视角。

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摘要

Since the 1970s, North American Indigenous peoples have struggled to organize, represent their identity as internal nations and assert their right to self-determination. Although Canada and Mexico have had a very different history, legal tradition, culture and ethnic composition, these countries have experienced a similar resurgence of Aboriginal movements. Nonetheless, Indigenous movements in these countries have rarely been examined under the lens of nationalism. Even less explored has been the relationship between Aboriginal nationalism, tradition and gender.; This dissertation explores how this relationship is expressed in four specific cases, in both Canada and Mexico. This dissertation argues that the construction of Indigenous nationalism is a political process in which traditional and historical models are evoked, gender roles are constructed, symbols, customs, political and social practices are selected in the assertion of the right to a homeland and self-determination. The political purpose of constructing nationalism is to represent a homogeneous identity and to create a sense of deep commonality based upon tradition. In the interface between nationalist discourses, territorial struggles and tradition, gender issues are diluted because gender is not the object of struggle but the collective experience of material and social inequalities. Nevertheless, as this study shows, conceptualizing struggles, defining membership, constructing the vision of the nation and distributing its material content is a gendered exercise.; The four cases studied in this dissertation are Nunavut, San Andres Larrainzar, Oaxaca, and the Nisga'a nation. The analysis of these cases suggests several interconnected conclusions. Fundamentally, in the process of constructing nationalism dominant groups also dominate the discourse on tradition and the subordinate groups whose discourse differs from that of the dominant. As the contestable issue of gender remains submerged in political struggles emphasizing cultural difference and experiences of material and social inequalities, Indigenous women' voices remain 'muted,' Nevertheless, as a subordinate group, Indigenous women act to transform the interface between discourses of place, tradition and politics in Aboriginal struggles. In this process, Indigenous women are not merely subject to unified racial and gendered identities, but are agents claiming to construct and mediate meaningful complex subjectivities.
机译:自1970年代以来,北美土著人民一直在努力组织,代表其作为内部国家的身份并主张其自决权。尽管加拿大和墨西哥的历史,法律传统,文化和族裔组成截然不同,但这些国家经历了类似的土著运动复兴。但是,这些国家的土著运动很少在民族主义的眼光下进行考察。关于土著民族主义,传统与性别之间的关系的探索甚至更少。本文探讨了在加拿大和墨西哥这四个具体案例中如何表达这种关系。本文认为,土著民族主义的建设是一个政治过程,在这个过程中唤起了传统和历史模式,建构了性别角色,选择了象征家园和自决权的象征,习俗,政治和社会实践。 。建构民族主义的政治目的是代表一种同质的身份,并在传统的基础上营造一种深刻的共性。在民族主义话语,领土斗争和传统之间的联系中,性别问题被淡化了,因为性别不是斗争的对象,而是物质和社会不平等的集体经验。然而,正如这项研究表明的那样,将斗争概念化,确定成员资格,构建国家愿景并分配其物质内容是一项性别平等的工作。本文研究的四个案例分别是努纳武特,圣安德烈斯·拉兰萨尔,瓦哈卡和尼斯加民族。对这些案例的分析提出了一些相互关联的结论。从根本上说,在建构民族主义的过程中,支配群体也支配着关于传统的论述,而支配群体的话语不同于支配者。由于性别争议问题仍然淹没在政治斗争中,强调文化差异以及物质和社会不平等的经历,土著妇女的声音仍然被“改变”,尽管如此,作为下属群体,土著妇女的作用是改变地方话语之间的联系,原住民斗争中的传统和政治。在这个过程中,土著妇女不仅要服从统一的种族和性别身份,而且要代理人声称要建构和调解有意义的复杂主观性。

著录项

  • 作者

    Altamirano-Jimenez, Isabel.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Alberta (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 University of Alberta (Canada).;
  • 学科 Political Science General.; Sociology Ethnic and Racial Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2006
  • 页码 444 p.
  • 总页数 444
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 政治理论;民族学;
  • 关键词

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