与殖民主义抗争:秘鲁境内委内瑞拉人颠沛流离的移民叙事

IF 3.4 2区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY Geoforum Pub Date : 2024-08-28 DOI:10.1016/j.geoforum.2024.104104
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文探讨了秘鲁境内的委内瑞拉移民如何就有时相互矛盾的身份、团结和现代性概念进行谈判。文章以非殖民化学术研究为基础,论证了对移民经历进行种族化描述的重要性。我发现,拉美人的共同身份促进了移民,强调团结和 "兄弟情谊"。然而,委内瑞拉人的叙述也强化了发展的等级观念,即白人比土著居民更先进。他们的故事揭示了在殖民主义权力下不断延续的共同身份话语与发展和现代化的等级理解之间的不断协商。我的研究结果重申,我们不仅需要考虑移民身份的多重交叉成分,还需要考虑在不同的空间背景下身份转变和具有不同意义的方式。文章以 18 篇移民叙事为基础,填补了研究移民自身如何重新理论化种族与发展的分析空白。通过以移民中的殖民性和种族化为中心,我对从欠发达国家向较发达国家移民的线性叙事提出了挑战,并展示了一些移民如何在应对脆弱性的同时,也在强化种族化他者化的不均衡权力动态。
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Contending with coloniality: Unsettling migration narratives of Venezuelans in Peru

This article explores how Venezuelan migrants in Peru negotiate sometimes-contradictory notions of identity, solidarity and modernity. Building from decolonial scholarship, it argues for the importance of situated racialized accounts of migrants’ experiences. I found that a common identity as Latin Americans facilitated migration, with an emphasis on solidarity and ‘brotherhood’. Yet, Venezuelans’ narratives also reinforced hierarchical notions of development that position whiter populations as more advanced than indigenous populations. Their stories reveal a constant negotiation between discourses of shared identity and hierarchical understandings of development and modernity that are constantly perpetuated under the coloniality of power. My findings reiterate a need to not only consider multiple intersecting components of migrant identities but also the ways in which identities shift and take on different meanings in different spatial contexts. Based on 18 migrant narratives, the article addresses a lacuna of analyses examining how migrants themselves re-theorize race and development. By centering coloniality and racialization in migration, I challenge linear narratives of migration from less developed to more developed countries and show how some migrants grapple with vulnerability while also reinforcing uneven power dynamics of racialized othering.

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来源期刊
Geoforum
Geoforum GEOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
5.70%
发文量
201
期刊介绍: Geoforum is an international, inter-disciplinary journal, global in outlook, and integrative in approach. The broad focus of Geoforum is the organisation of economic, political, social and environmental systems through space and over time. Areas of study range from the analysis of the global political economy and environment, through national systems of regulation and governance, to urban and regional development, local economic and urban planning and resources management. The journal also includes a Critical Review section which features critical assessments of research in all the above areas.
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