dc.creatorBecerra Peña, Sandra
dc.creatorMerino Dickinson, María
dc.creatorWebb, Andrew
dc.creatorLarranaga, Daniela
dc.date2018
dc.date2021-04-30T16:31:14Z
dc.date2021-04-30T16:31:14Z
dc.date.accessioned2021-06-14T21:59:57Z
dc.date.available2021-06-14T21:59:57Z
dc.identifierETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES,Vol.41,1255-1273,2018
dc.identifierhttp://repositoriodigital.uct.cl/handle/10925/2802
dc.identifier10.1080/01419870.2017.1287416
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/3298374
dc.descriptionThe phenomenon of migration to cities by indigenous Mapuche people of Chile is associated with various consequences, such as the loss of ethnic identity and cultural practices. This study aims to describe how ethnic identity is maintained through the recreation of ancestral cultural practices that Mapuche women promote in their families, generating identification to new spaces of residence. This qualitative research draws on analyses of forty-eight interviews conducted with twelve families from four neighbourhoods in Santiago. The study reveals ways in which key traditional Mapuche practices are translated and recreated through the processes of place-referent continuity and place-congruent continuity in new urban areas of residence which in turn express variant forms of ethnic identity and everyday politics of care that extend beyond folkloric notions of rural indigeneity and more static political ideologies of ethno-national autonomy.
dc.languageen
dc.publisherROUTLEDGE JOURNALS. TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
dc.sourceETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES
dc.subjectPlace identity
dc.subjectethnic identity
dc.subjectprinciple of continuity
dc.subjectMapuche women
dc.subjectindigenous culture
dc.subjectrecreated cultural practices
dc.titleRecreated practices by Mapuche women that strengthen place identity in new urban spaces of residence in Santiago, Chile
dc.typeArticle


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