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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp012227ms24x
Title: Subversion Through Self Starvation: Material and Symbolic Economies of Indigenous Women's Hunger in Bolivia
Authors: Maritz, Erik
Advisors: Legnani, Nicole D.
Department: Spanish and Portuguese
Certificate Program: Latin American Studies Program
Class Year: 2017
Abstract: What does it mean for a female body culturally constructed to nourish to publicly hunger in subversion? This thesis explores just that: the hunger strike as a form of counter-hegemonic resistance for indigenous women in Bolivia. In the Andes, where gender relations are dominated by notions of complementarity and symmetry that obscure the privileging of men to women in both the household and public life, indigenous women occupy a precarious position. Neoliberal reforms that threaten their access to communal resources have sparked national indigenous mobilizations, mobilizations that women themselves have been excluded from. Physically, culturally, and socioeconomically relegated to the home, indigenous women have been able to, at least temporarily, supercede this immobilization through their reappropriation of hunger as a means of resistance. This thesis attempts to disentangle how indigenous women’s hunger has been formulated as a dangerous, destabilizing force to the white, male, urban center, something in need of constant policing, and how indigenous women have turned this construction on its head. In publicly hungering, these women have achieved tangible results through forcing urban elites to acknowledge their complicity in indigenous communities’ pauperization and, in the process, revalorized indigenous womanhood and motherhood as powerful, subversive identities.
URI: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp012227ms24x
Type of Material: Princeton University Senior Theses
Language: en_US
Appears in Collections:Spanish and Portuguese, 2002-2020

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