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Recent Changes in Indigenous Feminist Agenda in Latin America

Producing Inclusive Feminist Knowledge: Positionalities and Discourses in the Global South

ISBN: 978-1-80071-171-6, eISBN: 978-1-80071-170-9

Publication date: 17 September 2021

Abstract

This chapter critically examines dialogues between indigenous feminists and academic feminists about the role and significance of indigenous epistemologies in constructing social scientific knowledge, particularly feminist epistemologies. We argue that the term indigenous feminisms must be understood as broadly linking gender equality, decolonization, and sovereignty for indigenous peoples. In Latin America, this term typifies an activist and practical movement with cultural, economic, and politically specific dimensions. We posit that analytical and theoretical frameworks developed from indigenous women’s ways of knowledge production should be recognized and legitimated in feminist discourse because much is learned from their worldview about women’s emancipation, the importance of intersectionality in terms of race, ethnicity, and gender in indigenous contexts, in addition to political and cultural critiques. We show that indigenous feminist theoretical formulations are not homogenous but overlap in some areas of theoretical and practical formulations that involve new conceptualizations of the body, space, time, action/movement, and memory.

Keywords

Citation

Matos, M. and Kambiwá, A.B. (2021), "Recent Changes in Indigenous Feminist Agenda in Latin America", Adomako Ampofo, A. and Beoku-Betts, J. (Ed.) Producing Inclusive Feminist Knowledge: Positionalities and Discourses in the Global South (Advances in Gender Research, Vol. 31), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 103-121. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-212620210000031006

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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