Services on Demand
Journal
Article
Indicators
- Cited by SciELO
- Access statistics
Related links
- Similars in SciELO
Share
Letras Verdes, Revista Latinoamericana de Estudios Socioambientales
On-line version ISSN 1390-6631
Abstract
PREMAUER, Anna and VALDIVIESO, Natalia. Allpa Mama: society-nature relations, social movements and agency. Letras Verdes [online]. 2018, n.23, pp.46-68. Epub Mar 01, 2018. ISSN 1390-6631. https://doi.org/10.17141/letrasverdes.23.2018.3033.
For theKichwawomen living at the Bobonaza and Curaray river basins, in the Pastaza Province, Ecuador, molding ceramics is not just an activity women should take care of, but it also implies a way of relating to other human and non-human beings inhabiting in their environment. It also conveys a relationship with the materials and social and symbolic structures that give meaning to their experience. Since 2012 oil extraction tenders in the Ecuadorian Amazon have been posing a threat to their life experience. In this context of threats associated to extractive concessions, a number ofKichwawomen -most of them ceramists- have become politically active and put forth their voice of disagreement to advocate the preservation of their territories. This paper seeks to illustrate howKichwawomen from Pastaza establish relationships with nature and territory through their bodies and the activity of “knitting” ceramics. It is argued that the activity of molding clay is both evidence of this relationship, and of economic and political means through whichKichwawomen knit social networks and become agents in defending their territories.
Keywords : body; ceramics; materiality; nature; territory; Kichwa.