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Beyond innocence: indigeneity and violent deployments of political un/reason in Bolivia

Winchell, Mareike ORCID: 0000-0002-9982-7969 (2024) Beyond innocence: indigeneity and violent deployments of political un/reason in Bolivia. Bolivian Studies Journal, 30. ISSN 1074-2247

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Abstract

This paper focuses on what critics have charged were false and duplicitous appeals to Indigeneity on the part of elected officials in twenty-first century Bolivia, a narrative confirmed by President Evo Morales’s continued support for neo-extractivist nationalism. Although such critiques gained sway among far-right critics of Morales in the months preceding his 2019 ousting, scholarly efforts to account for his removal also often approach Indigeneity either as a resilient anti-extractivist plurality or as a manipulated instrument emptied of content. Building from fieldwork and historiographical studies, this article shifts away from such charges of falsity or innocence to instead examine the relational workings of Indigeneity in a setting long defined by Quechua and Aymara skepticism toward programs of government-based uplift and historical redemption. Beyond providing a framework for authorizing and “knowing” Indigeneity, I examine how introduced notions of racialized difference have been key to popular Quechua and Aymara efforts to contest political, religious, and labor incursions. Among rural supporters in the decade preceding Morales’s ousting, shared appeals to Indigenous belonging and historical rootedness allowed new channels of claim-making. Rather than being neutralized, politicized invocations of shared Indigeneity contributed to a relational terrain by which supporters demanded elected officials’ responsiveness given what they perceived as the failures of institutional decolonization and the tragedies of state abandonment.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: © 2023 The Author
Divisions: Anthropology
Subjects: J Political Science
G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > GN Anthropology
Date Deposited: 05 Aug 2024 13:09
Last Modified: 19 Dec 2024 16:30
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/124469

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