Servitude Afterlives and the Demands of History in the Present

Speaker
Mareike Winchell - Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Chicago
Date
Fri February 10th 2023, 1:30 - 2:30pm
Event Sponsor
Center for Latin American Studies
Department of Anthropology

This talk, co-sponsored by the Stanford Department of Anthropology and the Center for Latin American Studies, builds on Professor Winchell's recently published book, After Servitude: Elusive Property and the Ethics of Kinship in Bolivia, to track the varied ways Bolivians navigate deep inequalities rooted in the nation’s history of Indigenous labor subjection. Government officials, Indigenous rights activists, and state land reformers view land redistribution as urgent for addressing Indigenous injustice, yet Professor Winchell's research showed how this program also re-entrenched racial and gender hierarchies. Theorizing after-ness not only as sequential following but also as the active repurposing of history in the present, Professor Winchell examines how the kin of Quechua servants navigate the region’s history of racial and sexual violence through practices of sacrifice and offering to saints and earth beings, an insistence that Mestizo bosses provide aid across hierarchies, and where that fails, by way of labor strikes and road blockades. Contesting the re-entrenchments of inequality in land reform, these practices activate a more durative understanding of justice as a matter of upholding relational attachments across violent pasts. This case offers key insights into how rights-based development programs can reproduce racialized and gendered land hierarchies, and how Quechua Bolivians have sought to refuse the formations of racialized blameworthiness at work in such reforms by pursuing other pathways of historical repair and redress.

 

Livestream: https://tinyurl.com/mwinchell