Este artículo presenta los hallazgos de una investigación acerca de la faja llamada chumbe elaborada por las tejedoras ingas del pueblo Santiago-Manoy del Alto Putumayo en Colombia. El objetivo de este trabajo es dilucidar y comprender las características del chumbe inga como artefacto cultural y mental, en tanto condensa y es lugar de inscripción de las redes de significación de la cultura del pueblo inga. La metodología utilizada es de tipo cualitativa. En el trabajo de campo se aplicaron herramientas como la entrevista semiestructurada, la observación participante y un registro fotodocumental del chumbe y los pictogramas que contiene. Una de las principales conclusiones es que el chumbe inga, en tanto artefacto mental y cultural, es un “arte de la memoria” en el que el pueblo inga expresa su cosmovisión y su saber técnico y estético ancestral.
This article presents the first findings of an investigation about the processes of identity formation and reproduction in the face of structural racism in tenek groups from the north of Veracruz, migrants in the southern metropolitan area of Tamaulipas. The proposal is part of the studies on indigenous migration and racism. The objective of this work is to show the current situation of tenek migrants and the way in which the various racism and classism they experience affect their identity formation. The methodology used is qualitative. The semi-structured interview and the documentary review were applied as research tools. One of the conclusions of the writing is that there is not a single type of racism but several about the tenek indigenous people, in addition the ways in which their identity is affected is heterarchical and depends on the previous social and economic resources that the migrant has in your place of origin.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.