Cultural Agency in the Americas

Cultural Agency in the Americas

  • Author: Sommer, Doris; Barbero, Jesus Martin; Taylor, Diana; Canclini, Néstor Garcia
  • Publisher: Duke University Press
  • ISBN: 9780822334873
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780822387480
  • Place of publication:  Durham , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2006
  • Month: January
  • Pages: 392
  • DDC: 306/.098
  • Language: English
“Cultural agency” refers to a range of creative activities that contribute to society, including pedagogy, research, activism, and the arts. Focusing on the connections between creativity and social change in the Americas, this collection encourages scholars to become cultural agents by reflecting on exemplary cases and thereby making them available as inspirations for more constructive theory and more innovative practice. Creativity supports democracy because artistic, administrative, and interpretive experiments need margins of freedom that defy monolithic or authoritarian regimes. The ingenious ways in which people pry open dead-ends of even apparently intractable structures suggest that cultural studies as we know it has too often gotten stuck in critique. Intellectual responsibility can get beyond denunciation by acknowledging and nurturing the resourcefulness of common and uncommon agents.

Based in North and South America, scholars from fields including anthropology, performance studies, history, literature, and communications studies explore specific variations of cultural agency across Latin America. Contributors reflect, for example, on the paradoxical programming and reception of a state-controlled Cuban radio station that connects listeners at home and abroad; on the intricacies of indigenous protests in Brazil; and the formulation of cultural policies in cosmopolitan Mexico City. One contributor notes that trauma theory targets individual victims when it should address collective memory as it is worked through in performance and ritual; another examines how Mapuche leaders in Argentina perceived the pitfalls of ethnic essentialism and developed new ways to intervene in local government. Whether suggesting modes of cultural agency, tracking exemplary instances of it, or cautioning against potential missteps, the essays in this book encourage attentiveness to, and the multiplication of, the many extraordinary instantiations of cultural resourcefulness and creativity throughout Latin America and beyond.

Contributors. Arturo Arias, Claudia Briones, Néstor García Canclini, Denise Corte, Juan Carlos Godenzzi, Charles R. Hale, Ariana Hernández-Reguant, Claudio Lomnitz, Jesús Martín Barbero, J. Lorand Matory, Rosamel Millamán, Diane M. Nelson, Mary Louise Pratt, Alcida Rita Ramos, Doris Sommer, Diana Taylor, Santiago Villaveces

  • Contents
  • Introduction: Wiggle Room
  • 1. Media
    • Intervening from and through Research Practice: Meditations on the Cuzco Workshop
    • Between Technology and Culture: Communication and Modernity in Latin America
    • DNA of Performance: Political Hauntology
    • A City that Improvises Its Globalization
  • 2. Maneuvers
    • The Cultural Agency of Wounded Bodies Politic: Ethnicity and Gender as Prosthetic Support in Postwar Guatemala
    • Tradition, Transnationalism, and Gender in the Afro-Brazilian Candomblé
    • The Discourses of Diversity: Language, Ethnicity, and Interculturality in Latin America
    • Conspiracy on the Sidelines: How the Maya Won the War
    • Radio Taino and the Cuban Quest for Identi . . . qué?
    • Olodum's Transcultural Spaces: Community and Differences in Afro-Brazilian Contemporary Performance
    • Political Construction and Cultural Instrumentalities of Indigenism in Brazil, with Echoes from Latin America
    • Questioning State Geographies of Inclusion in Argentina: The Cultural Politics of Organizations with Mapuche Leadership and Philosophy
  • 3. Cautions
    • Cultural Agency and Political Struggle in the Era of the Indio Permitido
    • The Crossroads of Faith: Heroism and Melancholia in the Colombian‘‘Violentologists’’ (1980–2000)
    • Afterword: A Fax, Two Moles, a Consul, and a Judge
    • Afterword: Spread It Around!
  • References
  • Contributors
  • Index

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

By subscribing, you accept our Privacy Policy