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El. knyga: Metamorphosis of Heads: Textual Struggles, Education, and Land in the Andes

  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Illuminations
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-May-2006
  • Leidėjas: University of Pittsburgh Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780822971023
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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Illuminations
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-May-2006
  • Leidėjas: University of Pittsburgh Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780822971023
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Since the days of the Spanish Conquest, the indigenous populations of Andean Bolivia have struggled to preserve their textile-based writings. This struggle continues today, both in schools and within the larger culture. The Metamorphosis of Heads explores the history and cultural significance of Andean textile writings--weavings and kipus (knotted cords), and their extreme contrasts in form and production from European alphabet-based texts. Denise Arnold examines the subjugation of native texts in favor of European ones through the imposition of homogenized curricula by the Educational Reform Law. As Arnold reveals, this struggle over language and education directly correlates to long-standing conflicts for land ownership and power in the region, since the majority of the more affluent urban population is Spanish speaking, while indigenous languages are spoken primarily among the rural poor. The Metamorphosis of Heads acknowledges the vital importance of contemporary efforts to maintain Andean history and cultural heritage in schools, and shows how indigenous Andean populations have incorporated elements of Western textual practices into their own textual activities.

Based on extensive fieldwork over two decades, and historical, anthropological, and ethnographic research, Denise Arnold assembles an original and richly diverse interdisciplinary study. The textual theory she proposes has wider ramifications for studies of Latin America in general, while recognizing the specifically regional practices of indigenous struggles in the face of nation building and economic globalization.



Provides a comprehensive ethnography of writing in the Andes, and details the relationship between Andean peoples’ struggle to preserve their indigenous textual forms in the face of Western cirricula, with their struggle for land and power.
List of Illustrations
ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(18)
PART 1 TEXTUAL STRUGGLES
1 Andean Textual Polity
19(19)
2 Colonizing Texts and the Struggle over Meanings
38(31)
PART 2 THE ROSTRUM OF HEADS
3 Land, Seeds, and Letters: The Cycles of Production and Reproduction
69(18)
4 Cycles of Metamorphosis: The Children as Enemies
87(23)
5 Warriors and Weavers: The Pathways of Learning in the Community
110(23)
6 The Cycles of Libations in School Rituals
133(28)
PART 3 ANDEAN TEXTS AND THEIR INTERPRETATION
7 Cycles of Memory: The Inka's Voice
161(22)
8 Cycles of Sound: Prayers and the "Rain of Letters"
183(24)
9 The Corporeality of Kipus: Toward a Mathematics Incarnate
207(18)
10 Kipu, Number, and Writing
225(19)
11 Textual Logic in the Andes
244(29)
12 Toward an Andean Textual Theory
273(18)
Notes 291(12)
Bibliography 303(20)
Index 323
Denise Y. Arnold is director of the Instituto de Lengua y Cultura Aymara, La Paz, Bolivia, and visiting professor at Birkbeck College London. She is the co-author with Juan de Dios Yapita of River of Fleece, River of Song. Denise Y. Arnold is director of the Instituto de Lengua y Cultura Aymara, La Paz, Bolivia, and visiting professor at Birkbeck College London. She is the co-author with Juan de Dios Yapita of River of Fleece, River of Song.