Vulnerable identities: Maya Yucatec identities in a postmodern world

In numerous anthropological works there have been preoccupations about the relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. Whatever social researchers have concluded, one thing is consistent: the tendency to interpret ethnographic "data" in terms of binary oppositions. This di...

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Main Author: Castillo Cocom, Juan
Format: Others
Published: FIU Digital Commons 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2080
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3334&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-fiu.edu-oai-digitalcommons.fiu.edu-etd-33342018-01-05T15:33:53Z Vulnerable identities: Maya Yucatec identities in a postmodern world Castillo Cocom, Juan In numerous anthropological works there have been preoccupations about the relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. Whatever social researchers have concluded, one thing is consistent: the tendency to interpret ethnographic "data" in terms of binary oppositions. This dissertation reviews the works which have been centered upon binary oppositions, as for instance, in the case of Yucatan, between the Maya and the Dzul-the Yucatec Maya term for white males-and highlights the fact that such works have failed to recognize that within and between each "pole," or social group there are individuals that have multiple identities, and that do not recognize themselves as belonging to a homogenized "pole." Instead, these individuals, recognize themselves as belonging to different groups and, therefore, being aware that they have not a single identity but multiple ones. Analogical anthropology is highly criticized because of its emphasis on binary oppositions, its authoritarianism, and the notion of the "Other." In contrast, dialogical anthropology places great importance on the relationship between the individuals and the anthropologist. A relation in which both, the anthropologist and the subject, are immersed in a dialogue, because of the identification between the writer and the story that is being written. However, anthropologists seem to be more interested in "dialoguing" among themselves rather than with the people that they write about. Indigenous people are relegated, they are voiceless, and, therefore, we keep treating them as "objects," and not as individuals. This is ironic, precisely because it undermines the aim of the dialogical discourse. In this context, awareness of self-identity or self-identities and the various ways in which Francisco, a good friend and the main character of this dissertation, assumes them, and the way I assume them, within multicultural contexts, leads us along the road to establish and reestablish communication. The methodology is based on four considerations: positioning, fieldwork conversations, self reflexivity and vulnerability. Hence, this dissertation constitutes an attempt to break with authoritarian models of ethnography, it is a dialogue between Francisco and me, a conversation among ourselves. A dialogue that expresses the desire of hearing our voices being echoed by each other. 2000-04-03T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2080 http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3334&context=etd FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations FIU Digital Commons Sociology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Sociology
spellingShingle Sociology
Castillo Cocom, Juan
Vulnerable identities: Maya Yucatec identities in a postmodern world
description In numerous anthropological works there have been preoccupations about the relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. Whatever social researchers have concluded, one thing is consistent: the tendency to interpret ethnographic "data" in terms of binary oppositions. This dissertation reviews the works which have been centered upon binary oppositions, as for instance, in the case of Yucatan, between the Maya and the Dzul-the Yucatec Maya term for white males-and highlights the fact that such works have failed to recognize that within and between each "pole," or social group there are individuals that have multiple identities, and that do not recognize themselves as belonging to a homogenized "pole." Instead, these individuals, recognize themselves as belonging to different groups and, therefore, being aware that they have not a single identity but multiple ones. Analogical anthropology is highly criticized because of its emphasis on binary oppositions, its authoritarianism, and the notion of the "Other." In contrast, dialogical anthropology places great importance on the relationship between the individuals and the anthropologist. A relation in which both, the anthropologist and the subject, are immersed in a dialogue, because of the identification between the writer and the story that is being written. However, anthropologists seem to be more interested in "dialoguing" among themselves rather than with the people that they write about. Indigenous people are relegated, they are voiceless, and, therefore, we keep treating them as "objects," and not as individuals. This is ironic, precisely because it undermines the aim of the dialogical discourse. In this context, awareness of self-identity or self-identities and the various ways in which Francisco, a good friend and the main character of this dissertation, assumes them, and the way I assume them, within multicultural contexts, leads us along the road to establish and reestablish communication. The methodology is based on four considerations: positioning, fieldwork conversations, self reflexivity and vulnerability. Hence, this dissertation constitutes an attempt to break with authoritarian models of ethnography, it is a dialogue between Francisco and me, a conversation among ourselves. A dialogue that expresses the desire of hearing our voices being echoed by each other.
author Castillo Cocom, Juan
author_facet Castillo Cocom, Juan
author_sort Castillo Cocom, Juan
title Vulnerable identities: Maya Yucatec identities in a postmodern world
title_short Vulnerable identities: Maya Yucatec identities in a postmodern world
title_full Vulnerable identities: Maya Yucatec identities in a postmodern world
title_fullStr Vulnerable identities: Maya Yucatec identities in a postmodern world
title_full_unstemmed Vulnerable identities: Maya Yucatec identities in a postmodern world
title_sort vulnerable identities: maya yucatec identities in a postmodern world
publisher FIU Digital Commons
publishDate 2000
url http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/2080
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3334&context=etd
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