The messy coloniality of gender and development in Indigenous Wixárika communities

Paulina Ultreras Villagrana, Jennie Gamlin, María Teresa Fernández Aceves
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Understanding the coloniality of gendered lives, family dynamics, social arrangements, and political structures in Indigenous communities begins with confronting and interrogating a history written largely by and for men in positions of power. The archives are limited in terms of what can be gleaned about gender equality and what existed before the proliferation of European patriarchy. Indigenous Wixárika people tread a delicate balance between a lifeworld that is organised around a ritual–agricultural cycle, and the accelerating incorporation of the imperial mode of living and the coloniality of being, into their communities and culture. The ‘coloniality of gender’ explains how Indigenous women and men have been drawn into and shaped through contact zones, these sites of imperial intervention that have brought social, cultural, and structural changes to gender. Problematically, this concept assumes a one-way process of domination, whereby modern European power structures were imposed on Indigenous people. A critical exploration reveals how gender dynamics and equality were influenced by a much messier process, entangled with Wixárika’s cultural and religious systems as well as the leveraging of political collateral. This paper will draw on findings from a historical and ethnographic study of the coloniality of gender in Indigenous Wixárika communities. We will critically examine archival evidence alongside oral histories to suggest how social, development, and political interventions from the late 20th century challenge the idea of the ‘coloniality of gender’, and discuss how past and present actants collide and dialogue to bring about social change and greater gender equality.
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Wixárika 土著社区性别与发展的混乱殖民性
摘要 要了解土著社区的性别生活、家庭动态、社会安排和政治结构的殖民地性质,首先要正视和审视主要由掌权男性书写并为其书写的历史。从档案中可以收集到的有关性别平等的信息以及欧洲父权制泛滥之前存在的情况是有限的。维萨里卡原住民的生活世界围绕着仪式--农业循环,而帝国的生活模式和存在的殖民性正在加速融入他们的社区和文化,在这两者之间,维萨里卡原住民保持着微妙的平衡。性别的殖民性 "解释了土著女性和男性是如何被卷入接触区并通过接触区被塑造的,这些帝国干预的场所给性别带来了社会、文化和结构上的变化。有问题的是,这一概念假定了一个单向的统治过程,即现代欧洲权力结构强加给土著人。批判性的探索揭示了性别动态和平等是如何受到一个混乱得多的过程的影响的,这个过程与 Wixárika 的文化和宗教体系以及政治附带的杠杆作用纠缠在一起。本文将借鉴对维萨里卡土著社区性别殖民化的历史和人种学研究结果。我们将批判性地研究档案证据和口述历史,以说明 20 世纪末的社会、发展和政治干预是如何挑战 "性别殖民 "这一概念的,并讨论过去和现在的行为者是如何通过碰撞和对话来实现社会变革和更大程度的性别平等的。
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