Artículos de revistas
The past as a lived space: Heritage places, re-emergent aesthetics, and hopeful practices in NW Argentina
Fecha
2013-06Registro en:
Lazzari, Marisa; Korstanje, María Alejandra; The past as a lived space: Heritage places, re-emergent aesthetics, and hopeful practices in NW Argentina; Sage Publications; Journal of Social Archaeology; 13; 3; 6-2013; 394-418
1469-6053
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Lazzari, Marisa
Korstanje, María Alejandra
Resumen
This article explores the past as a lived, inhabited reality through a series of examples of indigenous heritage practices in NW Argentina (NWA), a region that in recent decades has seen increasing indigenous demands for autonomy as well as for land and cultural rights. This article seeks to understand the locations where heritage struggles emerge, as well as the artefacts around which they emerge, as social, semantic, and physical spaces of ontological multiplicity. Understanding how such places and artefacts are constituted as lived-in-the-flesh realities today requires examination of the multiple present connections that make them possible, as well as inquiry into how the sedimentation of previous lived experiences contributes to present understandings. This article examines ancient places that become gravity points, fuelling both indigenous politics and an academic practice with its own aesthetic code. To varying degrees, the cases explored reflect our involvement – as archaeological researchers, professional advisors, and museum visitors – with re-emergent indigenous heritage practices in the region.