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Shamans' pragmatic gendered negotiations with Mapuche resistance movements and Chilean political authorities

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21 Scopus citations

Abstract

In this article, I look at the ways in which gendered national discourses and the discourses of Mapuche resistance movements coerce and construct shamans (machi) and the ways in which machi appropriate, transform, and contest these images. I explore the contradictions between machi's hybrid practices and their traditional representations of self and why they choose to represent themselves as they do. My interest lies in the ways in which studying gendered representations by and about machi, especially machi's nonideological political practices, can contribute to current discussions of power and resistance, agency and structure, and the practice of power itself. Recent anthropological work has focused on the particular historical, social, political, and economic contexts shaping how and why indigenous groups decide to protect and promote particular images of themselves. I focus not on the community politics in which machi are involved, but on machi's public faces in relation to national political figures and Mapuche political leaders such as longko.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)501-541
Number of pages41
JournalIdentities
Volume11
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2004

Keywords

  • Chile
  • Gender
  • Mapuche
  • Resistance
  • Shaman
  • State

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