La Colonia en la contemporaneidad: el “indio americano” de los indigenistas

Objective/Context: The article studies the continental concept of Indian disseminated by the indigenistas who, in the mid-twentieth century, were shaping a Pan-American indigenista field. Originality: Against the common idea that Indian is a colonial category, it suggests that the twentieth century...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laura Giraudo
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de los Andes 2020-01-01
Series:Historia Crítica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.7440/histcrit75.2020.04
id doaj-dfc2cea168d74d9eae4dc909a9f40e4c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-dfc2cea168d74d9eae4dc909a9f40e4c2020-11-25T01:25:40ZspaUniversidad de los Andes Historia Crítica0121-16171900-61522020-01-0175719210.7440/histcrit75.2020.04La Colonia en la contemporaneidad: el “indio americano” de los indigenistasLaura Giraudo0Escuela de Estudios Hispano-Americanos del Consejo Superior de Investigaciones CientíficasObjective/Context: The article studies the continental concept of Indian disseminated by the indigenistas who, in the mid-twentieth century, were shaping a Pan-American indigenista field. Originality: Against the common idea that Indian is a colonial category, it suggests that the twentieth century characterization of the Indian was a typically modern creation. Methodology: It is based on an analysis of unexplored printed primary sources, from a transnational approach that highlights the participation of indigenistas of different backgrounds and origins in the search for a continental notion of Indian. Conclusions: The analysis shows how the indigenista contribution reinforces an ongoing process of singularization and abstraction of this concept, also emphasizing the temporary ascription of the Indian and a history of domination and exploitation with effects up to the present day. Although this “Indian of the Americas” is shaped by typically modern elements, indigenistas defend the idea that it is a “colonial category”, determined by a colonial heritage (with effects on “character”) and by the persistence of a colonial situation/relationship. This indigenista resignification would represent an important legacy for later developments, by establishing the experience of colonization as an essential element in the definition of the Indianhttps://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.7440/histcrit75.2020.04colonialityindian (of the americas)indigenismoindigenistasmodernitytwentieth century
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Giraudo
spellingShingle Laura Giraudo
La Colonia en la contemporaneidad: el “indio americano” de los indigenistas
Historia Crítica
coloniality
indian (of the americas)
indigenismo
indigenistas
modernity
twentieth century
author_facet Laura Giraudo
author_sort Laura Giraudo
title La Colonia en la contemporaneidad: el “indio americano” de los indigenistas
title_short La Colonia en la contemporaneidad: el “indio americano” de los indigenistas
title_full La Colonia en la contemporaneidad: el “indio americano” de los indigenistas
title_fullStr La Colonia en la contemporaneidad: el “indio americano” de los indigenistas
title_full_unstemmed La Colonia en la contemporaneidad: el “indio americano” de los indigenistas
title_sort la colonia en la contemporaneidad: el “indio americano” de los indigenistas
publisher Universidad de los Andes
series Historia Crítica
issn 0121-1617
1900-6152
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Objective/Context: The article studies the continental concept of Indian disseminated by the indigenistas who, in the mid-twentieth century, were shaping a Pan-American indigenista field. Originality: Against the common idea that Indian is a colonial category, it suggests that the twentieth century characterization of the Indian was a typically modern creation. Methodology: It is based on an analysis of unexplored printed primary sources, from a transnational approach that highlights the participation of indigenistas of different backgrounds and origins in the search for a continental notion of Indian. Conclusions: The analysis shows how the indigenista contribution reinforces an ongoing process of singularization and abstraction of this concept, also emphasizing the temporary ascription of the Indian and a history of domination and exploitation with effects up to the present day. Although this “Indian of the Americas” is shaped by typically modern elements, indigenistas defend the idea that it is a “colonial category”, determined by a colonial heritage (with effects on “character”) and by the persistence of a colonial situation/relationship. This indigenista resignification would represent an important legacy for later developments, by establishing the experience of colonization as an essential element in the definition of the Indian
topic coloniality
indian (of the americas)
indigenismo
indigenistas
modernity
twentieth century
url https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.7440/histcrit75.2020.04
work_keys_str_mv AT lauragiraudo lacoloniaenlacontemporaneidadelindioamericanodelosindigenistas
_version_ 1725112576388366336