Earth Beings is the fruit of Marisol de la Cadena's decade-long conversations with Mariano and Nazario Turpo, father and son, runakuna or Quechua people. Concerned with the mutual entanglements of indigenous and nonindigenous worlds, and the partial connections between them, de la Cadena presents how the Turpos' indigenous ways of knowing and being include and exceed modern and nonmodern practices. Her discussion of indigenous political strategies—a realm that need not abide by binary logics—reconfigures how to think about and question modern politics, while pushing her readers to think beyond "hybridity" and toward translation, communication that accepts incommensurability, and mutual difference as conditions for ethnography to work.
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Marisol de la Cadena is Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Davis, and the author of Indigenous Mestizos: The Politics of Race and Culture in Cuzco, Peru, 1919–1991, also published by Duke University Press.
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Foreword
Preface. Ending This Book without Nazario Turpo
Story 1. Agreeing to Remember, Translating, and Carefully Co-laboring
Interlude 1. Mariano Turpo: A Leader In-Ayllu
Story 2. Mariano Engages "the Land Struggle": An Unthinkable Indian Leader
Story 3. Mariano's Cosmopolitics: Between Lawyers and Ausangate
Story 4. Mariano's Archive: The Eventfulness of the Ahistorical
Interlude 2. Nazario Turpo: "The Altomisayuq Who Went to Heaven"
Story 5. Chamanismo Andino in the Third Millennium: Multiculturalism Meets Earth-Beings
Story 6. A Comedy of Equivocations: Nazario Turpo's Collaboration with the National Musuem of the American Indian
Story 7. Munayniyuq: The Owner of the Will (and How to Control That Will)
Epilogue. Ethnographic Cosmopolitics
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index
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