Indigenous in the city: the politics of urban Mapuche identity in Chile |
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Authors: | Sarah D. Warren |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Sociology &2. Anthropology, Lewis &3. Clark College, Portland, USA |
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Abstract: | In this article, I analyse how urban Mapuche indigenous organizations in Chile conduct politics, both externally in relation to the state and internally in relation to other Mapuches. I suggest that the state creates the context for their politics through enacting centuries of policies that put Mapuche identity ‘under siege’. My analysis shows that urban Mapuche organizations respond to this context in three central ways. Some organizations refuse the moniker ‘urban’ and are temporarily urban. Others embrace their urbanity and are adamantly urban. Still others try to overcome the rural-urban divide to become reconciled urban. Each of these strategies deploys ideas of authenticity in different ways, opening possibilities for different kinds of political alliances. My research argues that when the stakes are high for claiming a racial or ethnic identity, choosing which aspects of identity on which to base political demands has profound political consequences. |
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Keywords: | Indigenous Chile identity authenticity urban citizenship |
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