Living a callejera methodology: Grounding María Lugones’ streetwalker theorizing in feminist decolonial praxis

M. Baumann
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract This intervention considers how the writings of María Lugones, a philosopher of feminist decolonial theory, might shape a callejera [streetwalker] feminist decolonial methodology and what such a methodology might look like in practice. I describe how a callejera methodology foments deeper relationality by highlighting as methodological tools three of Lugones’ concepts: resisting ↔ oppressing, the collective and tantear en la oscuridad. To ground the theory and illustrate possibilities of deeper relationality offered by a callejera methodology, I reflect on on-going research with Colombian collectives actively negotiating experiences of indigeneity and womanhood in relation to histories of colonial and more recent armed violence, as well as ongoing state disinvestment. I make three contributions. First, I suggest that integrating an intersectional analytic of ‘both/and’ with the complex fluidity between Lugones’ concept of resisting ↔ oppressing permits scholars to better understand the negotiation of multiple, intermeshed identities and oppressions, social inequality and power relations in relation to colonial histories and presents. Second, I encourage geographers to embrace a decolonial lens attentive to the relationality between and among collectives, from which many acts of resistance begin. Finally, I consider how a callejera methodology considers coalitional work as central to the research process. Such work embraces difficulty, discomfort and messy relationality often negotiated as if walking blindly through the dark (tantear). I conclude by arguing that geographers’ relationally-based research can strengthen feminist decolonial thought in our attention to spatial and temporal scalar differences of place and our commitment to understanding contextually differentiated navigations of identity.
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生活在一个callejera方法论:根植María lugoones的街头妓女理论在女权主义的非殖民化实践
本文考虑了女权主义非殖民化理论哲学家María lugoones的著作如何塑造了一种名为callejera(街头妓女)的女权主义非殖民化方法论,以及这种方法论在实践中可能是什么样子。我通过强调卢格内斯的三个概念作为方法论工具来描述calllejera方法论是如何形成更深层次的关联性的:抗↔压迫、集体和对统合的感知。为了巩固这一理论并说明callejera方法提供的更深层次关系的可能性,我反思了正在进行的与哥伦比亚集体积极谈判的土著人和妇女的经验,这些经验与殖民历史和最近的武装暴力以及正在进行的国家撤资有关。我有三个贡献。首先,我建议将“两者/和”的交叉分析与lugoones的抗↔压迫概念之间的复杂流动性相结合,使学者们能够更好地理解与殖民历史和现状有关的多重、相互交织的身份和压迫、社会不平等和权力关系的协商。其次,我鼓励地理学家采用一种非殖民的视角,关注集体之间和集体之间的关系,许多抵抗行动就是从这种关系开始的。最后,我将考虑callejera方法如何将联合工作视为研究过程的核心。这样的工作包含了困难、不适和混乱的关系,往往就像在黑暗中盲目行走一样。最后,我认为地理学家基于关系的研究可以加强我们对空间和时间标量地点差异的关注以及我们对理解背景差异的身份导航的承诺的女权主义去殖民主义思想。
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