Territorialidades Otras: Prácticas de Cuidado en los Procesos Autogestivos e Identitarios de la Nueva Área de Reincorporación de San José de León en el Municipio de Mutatá Antioquia
Date
2023-07-04Registration in:
Cabrera Lozano, A. M. y Londoño Bernal, N. (2022). Territorialidades Otras: Prácticas de Cuidado en los Procesos Autogestivos e Identitarios de la Nueva Área de Reincorporación de San José de León en el Municipio de Mutatá Antioquia. [Trabajo de Grado, Universidad Santo Tomás]. Repositorio Institucional.
reponame:Repositorio Institucional Universidad Santo Tomás
instname:Universidad Santo Tomás
Author
Ardila Chingal, Laura Melissa
Institutions
Abstract
Care practices have been historically conceived from feminizing notions, the private
sphere, and based on capital, sustaining life has been a factor that, since its invisibility, has
sustained most of the nations without recognizing the role played by racialized corporalities
and in this case impacted by the war. The present investigative approach emerges from the
interest in understanding care practices and their configuration around identity constructions,
and the self-management processes manifested in the individual and collective resistance of
the habitants from the New Area of Reincorporation of San José de Leon. A qualitative
methodology was used in dialogue with an ethnographic method. From which, an intersection
between the critical-social paradigm and the feminist epistemologies from the south was
woven. (Configured - recommendation) For the collection of information, strategies such as
participant observation, in-depth interviews, and body-territorial cartography were used. Could
be evidenced; the interruption of feminized and political identities in the consolidation of
productive bets and territorial planning based on collective care and the need to recognize self care as a tool of resistance for the sustainability of organizational practices; the incidence of
political identities assumed through counter-hegemonic masculinities in the exercise of
pedagogy and leadership of the productive processes of the territory. Finally, the leadership
roles of these contexts. they also allow us to question the dichotomous roles that have
historically devalued caregiving identities in economic and political settings