2020
DOI: 10.1080/1070289x.2020.1725310
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Unexpected places: land, words and silence in a Mapuche family trajectory of (dis)placement

Abstract: This article explores the relationship between land, words and silence, and the ways they are articulated in biographical trajectories. In the context of displacement and successive home-making, it follows the spatial and temporal trajectories of a Mapuche family, their non-linear routes through the experience of exile, and the process of dwelling in the elsewhere. Exile is addressed here as a condition of being, a tension between presence and absence that involves loss, and that is negotiated through the inte… Show more

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“…As such, at the core of the argument stands the possibility of thinking of the tuwün wariache as a trajectory , a particular mode of emplacement that results from acts of traversing different spatialities and places – across the city and in relation to migration – encompassing both ruptures and creative reappropriations. Alongside ideas already developed elsewhere (Casagrande 2020), the article aims at deepening current anthropological debate by taking into consideration creative acts of place‐ and self‐making in displacement that occur not despite, but through loss. It does so by drawing on practice‐based and creative methods, arguing for a much‐needed shared engagement with research participants in the contexts of migration and diaspora.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, at the core of the argument stands the possibility of thinking of the tuwün wariache as a trajectory , a particular mode of emplacement that results from acts of traversing different spatialities and places – across the city and in relation to migration – encompassing both ruptures and creative reappropriations. Alongside ideas already developed elsewhere (Casagrande 2020), the article aims at deepening current anthropological debate by taking into consideration creative acts of place‐ and self‐making in displacement that occur not despite, but through loss. It does so by drawing on practice‐based and creative methods, arguing for a much‐needed shared engagement with research participants in the contexts of migration and diaspora.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%