The article investigates diverging heritage practices in plurinational Bolivia. It draws on the Aymara concept of taypi to address heritage conflicts from a cosmopolitical perspective on memory and territoriality. Place-based histories and socio-material assemblages redefine Indigenous heritage as a multi-temporal meeting ground between state, local communities and more-than-human-beings.
Orlandi, F. (In stampa/Attività in corso). Fence and friction at Tiwanaku (Bolivia): An archaeological ethnography of heritage, indigeneity and rights. HISTORY AND ANTHROPOLOGY, ahead of print, 1-21 [10.1080/02757206.2025.2460829].
Fence and friction at Tiwanaku (Bolivia): An archaeological ethnography of heritage, indigeneity and rights
Orlandi, Francesco
In corso di stampa
Abstract
The article investigates diverging heritage practices in plurinational Bolivia. It draws on the Aymara concept of taypi to address heritage conflicts from a cosmopolitical perspective on memory and territoriality. Place-based histories and socio-material assemblages redefine Indigenous heritage as a multi-temporal meeting ground between state, local communities and more-than-human-beings.File in questo prodotto:
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