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In Bolivia's plurinational conjuncture, novel political articulations, legal reform, and processes of collective identification converge in unprecedented efforts to 're-found' the country and transform its society. This ethnography explores the experiences of Afrodescendants in plurinational Bolivia and offers a fresh perspective on the social and political transformations shaping the country as a whole. Moritz Heck analyzes Afrobolivian social and cultural practices at the intersections of local communities, politics, and the law, shedding light on novel articulations of Afrobolivianity and evolving processes of collective identification. This study also contributes to broader anthropological debates on blackness and indigeneity in Latin America by pointing out their conceptual entanglements and continuous interactions in political and social practice.
Afrodescendants. --- Ethnicity. --- Indigeneity. --- African diaspora. --- Racism. --- Social movements. --- African Diaspora. --- America. --- Cultural Anthropology. --- Cultural History. --- Ethnology. --- Plurinationality. --- Social Movements.
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The Spanish nation has been contested almost since its conception in the early nineteenth century, and the Spanish state has therefore been involved in perpetual conflicts between various nationalisms, particularly between different versions of Spanish nationalism as well as between Spanish majority nationalism and various minority nationalisms. At different times in history, the conflicts have revived and turned into organizing principles of the political communities in Spain, as communities in conflict or contention but, nevertheless, as communities providing the Spaniards with different senses of belonging. In recent times, both lines of contention have been activated again, and in this volume, we focus particularly on the conflict between majority and minority nationalism, which has been revived from approximately 2010 around the Catalan separatist conflict, but other sub-state identities are potentially conflictual as well. Both the state-wide – Spanish – as well as the sub-state actors try to develop feelings of territorial attachments to the Spanish political community or to the respective sub-state political communities, and both use emotions and feelings to secure support and to assert or claim sovereignty for the political community in question. The contributions in this volume shed light on various issues related to these questions.
Peace studies & conflict resolution --- International relations --- Catalonia --- language --- class --- identity --- three-cornered conflict --- independence --- Alternative für Deutschland --- Vox España --- national identity --- nationalism --- nativism --- crisis --- Islamophobia --- European Union --- Spain --- radical right --- VOX --- Andalusia --- voting behaviour --- transnationalism --- immigration --- emigration --- migration --- homeland tourism --- Galicia --- America --- regionalism --- interculturalism --- Andalusi music --- heritage --- migrations --- coexistence --- plurinationality --- spain --- autonomy --- intersubjective national identity --- secessionism --- household net income --- family/mother language --- Spanish conservatives --- authoritarism --- regime-changing --- political culture --- Spanish transition --- Alianza Popular --- Manuel Fraga --- nation --- patria (fatherland) --- patriotism --- citizenship --- deliberation --- self-government --- early modern history --- modern history --- historiography --- civil society --- memory space --- commemorations --- mixed methods --- protest --- social media
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