Description
Book SynopsisThis work of activist anthropology investigates the decolonializing cultural practices that the Zapatistas of Chiapas employed to resist the racialized policies of the Mexican neoliberal state and assert their autonomy.
Trade ReviewRemarkable…Mora does not limit her analysis to examine Zapatista indigenous autonomy from a de-colonial framework, but also decolonizes her own research methods...
Kuxlejal Politics contributes to expand the discussion on the various autonomous projects underway in Latin America and to challenge the research methodology of the anthropology in contact with indigenous peoples. * European Review of Latin American and Carribean Studies *
A brilliant ethnography of a movement from below that simply refused to accept the prevailing ideological, social, and political structures of oppression. * Latin American Perspectives *
[An] innovative book…decolonial approaches are needed to reframe research and knowledge production in geography; such a reframing should be attentive to multiple and diverse ontologies and epistemologies…
Kuxlejal Politics is exemplary of how the work of reframing might be done. More than that, it is a vision of a life politics that gives me hope. * Journal of Latin American Geography *
Mora’s project is a model of collaborative research with the communities she did research in....Mora does not romanticise the Zapatista movement; rather, she allows her research subjects to step out of the background of data collection. In this way, her conceptualisation helps us to understand the historical roots and current practices of Zapatista communities by placing them centre stage. * ALMA Reviews *
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- One. A Brief Overview of the First Years of the Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities (1996–2003)
- Two. The Production of Knowledge on the Terrain of Autonomy: Research as a Topic of Political Debate
- Three. Social Memories of Struggle and Racialized (E)states
- Four. Zapatista Agrarian Reform within the Racialized Fields of Chiapas
- Five. Women’s Collectives and the Politicized (Re)production of Social Life
- Six. Mandar Obedeciendo; or, Pedagogy and the Art of Governing
- Conclusion: Zapatismo as the Struggle to Live within the Lekil Kuxlejal Tradition of Autonomy
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index