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Título
From Disappearance to Hope: The Construction of the Brazilian Indigenous Movement’s Imaginary (1974-1977)
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Brazilian Indigenous movement
Military dictatorship
Indigenous issues
Imaginary
Clasificación UNESCO
5504.02-1 Historia Contemporánea. Área Americana
Fecha de publicación
2024
Editor
Sage Journals
Citación
Benitez Trinidad, C., & Soares dos Santos Bicalho, P. (2024). From Disappearance to Hope: The Construction of the Brazilian Indigenous Movement’s Imaginary (1974-1977). Latin American Perspectives, 51(4), 81-99. https://doi.org/10.1177/0094582X241296815 (Original work published 2024)
Resumen
This article analyzes the construction of the imaginary created by the Brazilian
Indigenous Movement against the historical representations imposed by the non-indigenous,
of disappearance, and backwardness. It is based on the study of the speeches of the
assemblies of Indigenous chiefs between 1974 and 1977. The crisis of institutional
Indigenism, military authoritarianism, and developmentalism announced the extinction
of Indigenous peoples. Faced with ethnocidal integrationism, the Indigenous chiefs had to
deal with the challenge of ethnic differences, external influence, and dehumanizing stereotypes
to build a new ideological framework. This research focuses on the mechanisms that
led from an imaginary of disappearance to one of hope in a context of aggressive growth of
neoliberal threats against Indigenous lands.
URI
ISSN
0094-582X
DOI
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0094582X241296815
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