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‘Dirty Indians’, Radical <i>Indígenas</i>, and the Political Economy of Social Difference in Modern Ecuador<sup>1</sup>
140
Citations
27
References
1998
Year
ColonialismLatin American StudyEducationIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementSocial ChangeCultural StudiesIndigenous StudyLatin American DiasporaAfrican American StudiesPolitical EconomyLatin American SocietyLatin American HistorySocial DifferenceLatin American CultureLatin American StudiesAlternative ConceptionsCultureHumanitiesIndigenous StudiesEthnographyAnthropologySocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
Abstract — This article examines alternative conceptions of social difference in Otavalo, Ecuador. On the one hand, in the northern Andes, the language of ethnicity has become a potent force, connected to an indigenous political movement and the profits of handicraft dealing. On the other, ‘race’ and an ‘hygienic racism’ preoccupied with pernicious stereotypes about ‘dirty Indians’ continue to define the social and political landscape. Contrasting these notions of social difference, I show how the indigenous movement in Ecuador receives less support from native peasants who see the world in polarised ‘racial’ terms.
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