Lexington Books
Pages: 282
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-3848-0 • Hardback • December 2016 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-4985-3850-3 • Paperback • December 2018 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
978-1-4985-3849-7 • eBook • December 2016 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
Anders Burman is associate professor at the Human Ecology Division at Lund University.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Los aymaras
Chapter 2: Colonialism and Decolonization: Experience and Narrative
Part I: The Illness (Ay. Usu)
Chapter 3: Strange Patria
Chapter 4: Strange Being
Chapter 5: Strange World
Part II: The Cure (Ay. Qulla)
Chapter 6: Native Being
Chapter 7: Native World
Chapter 8: Native Patria
Conclusions
Word list
Bibliography
About the Author
Candidly and with respect to those that may think that ‘tradition’ is timeless, this book experiences Aymara politics as re-membering. I think of this word as a conceptual practice, proposed by young Aymara intellectuals-politicians as a de-colonial practice of the self with which to bring to awareness that which denies their possibilities of exceeding the practices imposed by modernity, while at the same time using that which modernity offers to, precisely, emerge against the denial. The book is an ethnographically brilliant and carefully composed work in which Burman does not study the yatiris; he learns with them other ways of knowing and he thereby transforms ‘participant observation’ into experience and proposes a novel notion of methods; not a practice of collecting data, but a practice of knowing through fieldwork.
— Marisol de la Cadena, University of California, Davis
The outstanding and fascinating contribution of Indigeneity and Decolonization is that it shows the deep interpenetration between the political and spiritual worlds of Aymara healers. Based on their ritual practices involving the body, mind, and nature, it offers us an important new way to think about decolonization as a process of healing the afflictions of history and the sickness of society. As the product of Burman's intimate engagement in the daily lives of the maestros, it is itself an example of the decolonization of ethnography.
— Sinclair Thomson, New York University
Indigeneity and Decolonization provides a detailed, rigorous, and committed insight into the fascinating creation and recreation of Aymara ways of being and feeling. It’s an indispensable guide to understand how, in the twenty-first century, traditions are maintained while novelties are added to Aymara knowledges and feelings, including humans as well as nature.
— Eduardo Gudynas, Latin American Center of Social Ecology (CLAES)
After more than a decade in Bolivia where indigeneity and decolonization have been key tropes in political discourse, Anders Burman offers a magnificent example of, not only a decolonizing anthropology, but an anthropology of decolonization. For his Aymara activist interlocutors, colonialism is an illness much like any other and in his fine-grained and sensitive analysis Burman explores the ways in which power, ritual and being are intimately linked. Burman achieves the enviable goal of offering a genuinely fresh look at the politics of indigeneity in the Andes while providing a valuable contribution to debates about the ‘ontological turn’ in anthropology.
— Andrew Canessa, University of Essex