Indigenous Education pp 429-446 | Cite as
Identity and Indigenous Education in Peruvian Amazonia
Abstract
Throughout Peruvian Amazonia, state-backed educational institutions and pedagogical strategies have seldom emphasized the retention of indigenous knowledge. This in turn has historically undermined the cultural survival of the region’s culturally diverse indigenous peoples. Indeed, the story of formal “modern” indigenous education in the Peruvian Amazon is intimately related to state-driven introductions of Occidental concepts of “progressive” development, eventually anchored to incorporation into global markets. While it is clear that prospects for indigenous peoples’ cultural survival may be analyzed in general sweeping terms, it is also evident that a close analysis of each local or regional case reveals significant differences in approaches to contextualizing inter-cultural education and indigenous identity politics. Taking my cue from Lyotard’s The Postmodern Condition, which provides a basis for understanding and critiquing neo-liberal commoditization of education, I explore some of these contradictions as they find expression “on the ground” among indigenous peoples from Alto Amazonas, (Loreto, Peru). The chapter concludes by asserting that the intercultural educational environment in Peru must be formulated to include systems of Indigenous Knowledge that synergize both the school and the community’s well-being.
Keywords
Peruvian Amazon Indigenous knowledge Intercultural education Latin America PeruReferences
- Adams, Cristina. 2009. Amazon peasant societies in a changing environment: Political ecology, invisibility and modernity in the rainforest. Berlin: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. 2012. The languages of the Amazon. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. 2013. Shifting language attitudes in North-West Amazonia. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 222: 195–216.Google Scholar
- Aikman, Sheila. 1999. Intercultural education and literacy – An ethnographic study of Arakmbut education. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Aikman, Sheila. 2013. Alternative development and education. In Education, cultures, and economics: Dilemmas for development, ed. Angela W. Little and Fiona E. Leach, 95–110. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
- Alarcón Puentes, J. 2007. Las Relaciones de Poder Político en el Pueblo Wayuu. Mérida, Ediciones del Vice Rectorado Académico, Universidad del Zulia.Google Scholar
- Alexiades, Miguel N. (ed.). 2009. Mobility and migration in indigenous Amazonia: Contemporary ethnoecological perspectives. New York: Berghahn Books.Google Scholar
- Ames, Patricia. 2012. Constructing new Identities? The role of gender and education in rural girls’ life aspirations. Peru Gender and Education 25: 267–283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Anderson, Benedict. 1983. Imagined communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. London: Verso.Google Scholar
- Arnauld de Sartre, Xavier, Vincent Berdoulay, and Raquel da Silva Lopes. 2012. Eco-frontier and place-making: The unexpected transformation of a sustainable settlement project in the Amazon. Geopolitics 17(3): 578–606.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Brokamp, Grischa, Natalia Valderrama, Moritz Mittelbach, César A.R. Grandez, Anders S. Barfod, and Maximilian Weigend. 2011. Trade in palm products in North-Western South America. The Botanical Review 77(4): 571–606.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Brown, Michael F. 1998. Can culture be copyrighted? Current Anthropology 39(2): 193–222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Bunker, Stephen. 1985. Underdeveloping the Amazon. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
- Burga, Elena. 2011. El Caso de los Kukama-Kukamiria y Tikuna. Tarea: Revista de Educación y Cultura 76: 44–48.Google Scholar
- Champagne, Duane. 2004. Education for nation building. (Special Issue: Indigenous education and the prospects for cultural survival, ed. Bartholomew Dean.) Cultural Survival Quarterly 27(4): 35–38.Google Scholar
- Cheah, Pheng, and Bruce Robbins (eds.). 1998. Cosmopolitics: Thinking and feeling beyond the nation. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
- Cooper, James M., and Christine Hunefeldt. 2013. Amazonia: Environment and the law in Amazonia: A plurilateral encounter. Portland: Sussex Academic Press.Google Scholar
- Crosby, A. 2003. The Columbian Exchange: The biological and cultural consequences of 1492. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.Google Scholar
- Crystal, David. 2000. Language death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Davidov, Veronica. 2013. Ecotourism and cultural production: An anthropology of indigenous spaces in Ecuador. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 1999a. Intercambios Ambivalentes en la Amazonía: Formación Discursiva y la Violencia del Patronazgo. Anthropologica 17: 85–115.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 1999b. Language, culture, and power: Intercultural bilingual education among the Urarina of Peruvian Amazonia. Practicing Anthropology 21(2): 39–43.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2002. State power and indigenous peoples in Peruvian Amazonia: A lost decade, 1990–2000. In The politics of ethnicity: Indigenous peoples in Latin American States, ed. David Maybury-Lewis, 199–238. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2003. At the margins of power: Gender hierarchy & the politics of ethnic mobilization among the Urarina. In At the risk of being heard: Identity, indigenous rights & postcolonial states, ed. Bartholomew Dean and Jerome Levi, 217–254. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2004a. Ambivalent exchanges: The violence of patronazgo in the upper Amazon. In Cultural construction of violence: Victimization, escalation, response, ed. Anderson Myrdene, 214–226. West Lafayette: Purdue University.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2004b. El Dr. Máxime Kuczynski-Godard y la Medicina Social en la Amazonía Peruana. In La Vida en la Amazonía Peruana: Observaciones de un Médico, ed. Máxime Kuczynski-Godard. Lima: Fondo Editorial de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos (Serie Clásicos Sanmarquinos).Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2004c. Digital vibes and radio waves in indigenous Peru. In Indigenous intellectual property rights: Legal obstacles and innovative solutions, ed. Mary Riley. Walnut Creek: Altamira Press.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2004d. Indigenous education and the prospects for cultural survival. Cultural Survival Quarterly 27(4): 14–18.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2009. Machetes in our hands, blood on our faces: Reflections on violence and advocacy in the Peruvian Amazon. Anthropological Quarterly 82(4): 1069–1072.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2011. Review of Coca’s “gone: Of might and right in the Huallaga post-boom” by Richard Kernaghan. The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 16(2): 468–470.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2012. South America: Lowland ethnology section. Handbook of Latin American Studies 67: 99–118.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2013a. Urarina society, cosmology and history in Peruvian Amazonia, 2nd ed. (originally published in 2009). Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2013b.“Cocaine capitalisms & social trauma in Peruvian Amazonia” panoramas: Foro: Commentario Latino Americano, 1–9. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew. 2013c. Epilogue. In Ethnography of support encounters, ed. Schlecker Markus and Fleischer Friederike, 195–211. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew, and Jerome Levi (eds.). 2003. At the risk of being heard: Identity, indigenous rights and postcolonial states. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew, Eliana Elias Valdeavellano, Michelle McKinley, and Rebekah Saul. 2000. The Amazonian peoples’ resources initiative: Promoting reproductive rights and community development in the Peruvian Amazon. Health and Human Rights 4(2): 219–226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Dean, Bartholomew, Sydney Silverstein, Matthew Reamer, and Joshua Homan. 2011. The new urban jungle. Cultural Survival Quarterly 35(2): 34–45.Google Scholar
- Defensoría del Pueblo. 2001. Pueblo Urarina: Conciencia de Grupo y Principio Precautorio. Lima: Defensoría del Pueblo.Google Scholar
- “El Petróleo en la Selva”: Proyecto Operación Jornada que se Ejecuta en la Cuenca del Río Corrientes. 2013. La Región: Diario Judicial de Loreto. Available online at: http://diariolaregion.com/web/2013/08/14/mejorar-la-calidad-de-la-educacion-y-fortalecer-el-enfoque-ambiental-en-comunidades-achuar. Accessed 14 Nov 2013.
- Escobar, Arturo. 1995. Encountering development: The making and unmaking of the third world. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
- Espinosa, O. 2012. To be shipibo nowadays: The shipibo-konibo youth organizations as a strategy for dealing with cultural change in the Peruvian Amazon Region. The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 17(3): 451–471.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Foucault, Michel. 1972. The archaeology of knowledge. New York: Pantheon Books.Google Scholar
- García Jordán, Pilar, ed. 1995. La Construcción de la Amazonía Andina, Siglos XIX-XX: Procesos de Ocupación y Transformación de la Amazonía Peruana y Ecuatoriana entre 1820 y 1960. Quito: Abya-Yala.Google Scholar
- Graham, Laura. 1995. Performing dreams: Discourses of immortality among the Xavante of Central Brazil. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
- Greene, Shane. 2009. Customizing indigeneity: Paths to a visionary politics in Peru. Redwood City: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
- Habermas, Jurgen, John B. Thompson, and David Held. 1982. Habermas: Critical debates. London: MacMillan Press.Google Scholar
- Harvey, David. 1973. Social justice and the city. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
- Hornborg, Alf. 2013. Global ecology and unequal exchange: Fetishism in a zero-sum world. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
- Hornborg, Alf, and Jonathan D. Hill (eds.). 2011. Ethnicity in ancient Amazonia: Reconstructing past identities from archaeology, linguistics, and ethnohistory. Boulder: University Press of Colorado.Google Scholar
- Hornborg, Alf, J.R. McNeill, and Joan Martinez-Alier (eds.). 2007. Rethinking environmental history: World-system history and global environmental change. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
- Huaman, Elizabeth Sumida, and Laura Alicia Valdiviezo. 2012. Indigenous knowledge and education from the Quechua community to school: Beyond the formal/non-formal dichotomy. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education 2012(Nov.): 1–23.Google Scholar
- Hume, David. 1739. A treatise of human nature: Being an attempt to introduce the experimental method of reasoning into moral subjects. London: John Noon.Google Scholar
- Izu, Regina Moromizato. 2011. Niños de la Amazonía. Una Experiencia de Trabajo Conjunto por una Mejor Educación para los Niños y las Niñas Asháninkas de la Selva Central del Perú. Educación 20(39): 73–92.Google Scholar
- Jackson, Jean. 1995. Culture, genuine and spurious: The politics of Indianness in the Vaupes, Colombia. American Ethnologist: the Journal of the American Ethnological Society 22(1): 3–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Jaramillo Salazar, Pablo. 2006. El Jaibaná en la Encrucijada: Ritual, Territotrio y Política en una Poblacion Embera. Manizales: Editorial Universidad de Caldas.Google Scholar
- Justice, Anne, Bartholomew Dean, and Michael H. Crawford. 2012. Molecular consequences of migration and urbanization in Peruvian Amazonia. In Causes and consequences of human migration, ed. Michael H. Crawford and Benjamin C. Campbell, 449–472. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kernaghan, Richard. 2009. Coca’s gone: Of might and right in the Huallaga post-boom. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
- Killick, Evan. 2008. Creating community: Land titling, education, and settlement formation among the ashéninka of Peruvian Amazonia. The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 13(1): 22–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Klarén, Peter Flindell. 2000. Peru: Society and nationhood in the Andes. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
- Knowles, Fred Edward. 2012. Toward emancipatory education: An application of Habermasian theory to Native American educational policy. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education 25(7): 885–904.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kuczynski-Godard, Máxime. 1944. La Vida en la Amazonía Peruana: Observaciones de un Médico. Lima: Librería Internacional del Perú.Google Scholar
- Lazar, Sian. 2013. The anthropology of citizenship: A reader. Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
- Levi, Jerome, and Bartholomew Dean. 2003. Introduction. In At the risk of being heard: Identity, indigenous rights & postcolonial states, ed. Bartholomew Dean and Jerome Levi, 1–44. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
- Lucero, Juan. 2006. Representing “real Indians” the challenges of indigenous authenticity and strategic constructivism in Ecuador and Bolivia. Latin American Research Review 41(2): 31–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Lyotard, Jean-Francois. 1984. The postmodern condition: A report on knowledge. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
- Madrid, Raúl L. 2012. The rise of ethnic politics in Latin America. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Mato, Daniel. 2009. Educación Superior, Colaboración Intercultural y Desarrollo Sostenible/Buen Vivir: Experiencias en América Latina. Caracas: UNESCO y IESALC, Instituto Internacional de la UNESCO para la Educación Superior en América Latina y el Caribe.Google Scholar
- Mato, Daniel. 2011. There is no “universal” knowledge, intercultural collaboration is indispensable. Social Identities: Journal for the Study of Race, Nation and Culture 17(3): 409–421.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Maybury-Lewis, David. 2002. Indigenous peoples, ethnic groups, and the state. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.Google Scholar
- Maybury-Lewis, David, Theodore Macdonald, and Biorn Maybury-Lewis (eds.). 2009. Manifest destinies and indigenous peoples. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
- Mayer, Enrique. 2009. Ugly stories of the Peruvian Agrarian reform. Durham: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Merry, Sally Engle. 2006. Human rights and gender violence: Translating international law into local justice. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
- Muratorio, Blanca. 1998. Indigenous Women’s identities and the politics of cultural reproduction in the Ecuadorian Amazon. American Anthropologist 100(2): 409–420.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Nugent, Stephen. 1993. Amazonian Caboclo society: An essay on invisibility and peasant economy. Providence: Berg.Google Scholar
- Nugent, Stephen. 2009. Indigenism and cultural authenticity in Brazilian Amazonia. London: Goldsmiths College, University of London.Google Scholar
- Nunn, Nathan and Nancy Qian. 2010. The Columbian exchange: A history of disease, food, and ideas. Journal of Economic Perspectives 24(2): 163–188.Google Scholar
- Peluso, Daniela M., et~al. 2004. Indigenous places and struggles for resistance. Berkeley: Center for Environmental Design Research, University of California at Berkeley.Google Scholar
- Quintero, Julian Andres, Erika Ruth Felix, Luis Eduardo Rincón, Marianella Crisspín, Jaime Fernandez Baca, Yasmeen Khwaja, and Carlos Ariel Cardona. 2012. Social and techno-economical analysis of biodiesel production in Peru. Energy Policy 43: 427–435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Rénique, Gerardo. 2009. Law of the jungle in Peru: Indigenous Amazonian uprising against neoliberalism. Socialism and Democracy 23(3): 117–135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Reno, Joshua. 2011. Beyond risk: Emplacement and the production of environmental evidence. American Ethnologist 38(3): 516–530.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Rescher, Nicholas. 1993. Pluralism: Against the demand for consensus. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
- Rosaldo, Renato. 1989. Culture & truth: The remaking of social analysis. Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
- Rumrrill, Roger. 1986. Narcotráfico y Violencia Politica en la Amazonia Peruana: Dos Nuevas Variables en la Vieja Historia de la Selva Alta y Baja del Peru. Peru: S.I.Google Scholar
- Saavedra, J.L., and A. Escobar. 2007. Educación superior, interculturalidad y descolonización. La Paz: Programa de Investigación Estratégica en Bolivia.Google Scholar
- Sawyer, Suzana. 2004. Crude chronicles: Indigenous politics, multinational oil, and neoliberalism in Ecuador. Durham: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Schneider, Jane, and Rayna Rapp (eds.). 1995. Articulating hidden histories: Exploring the influence of Eric R. Wolf. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
- Stocks, Anthony. 1983. Native enclaves in the Upper Amazon: A case of regional non-integration. Ethnohistory 30(2): 77–92.Google Scholar
- Tapayuri Murayari, B. 2012. Preface. In Anthropological illuminations of the varieties of human experience, 2nd ed, ed. Bartholomew Dean and Joshua Homan, vii. Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt.Google Scholar
- Thypin-Bermeo, Sam, and Brian Godfrey. 2012. Envisioning Amazonian frontiers: Place-making in a Brazilian boomtown. Journal of Cultural Geography 29(2): 215–238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Trapnell, Lucy. 2011. Desde la Amazonía Peruana: Aportes para la Formación Docente en la Especialidad de Educación Inicial Intercultural Bilingüe. Educación 20(39): 37–50.Google Scholar
- Turner, Terence. 2002. Representation, politics and cultural imagination in indigenous video: General points and Kayapo examples. In The social practice of media, ed. Faye Ginsburg, Lila Abu-Lughod, and Brian Larkin, 75–89. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
- Valdivia, Gabriela. 2007. The “Amazonian trial of the century”: Indigenous identities, transnational networks, and petroleum in Ecuador. Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 32(1): 41–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Varese, Stefano. 2002. Salt of the mountain: Campa Asháninka history and resistance in the Peruvian jungle. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Google Scholar
- Vasquez, Patricia. 2014. Oil sparks in the Amazon: Local conflicts, indigenous populations, and natural resources. Athens: University of Georgia Press.Google Scholar
- Viatoria, Maximilian. 2010. One state, any nations: Indigenous rights struggles in Ecuador. Santa Fe: School for Advanced Research Global Indigenous Politics, SAR Press.Google Scholar
- Virtanen, Pirjo Kristiina. 2010. Amazonian Native youths and notions of indigeneity in urban areas. Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 17(2–3): 154–175.Google Scholar
- Virtanen, Pirjo Kristiina. 2012. Indigenous youth in Brazilian Amazonia: Changing lived worlds. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Whitten, Norman, and Dorothea Whitten. 2008. Puyo Runa: Imagery and power in modern Amazonia. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
- Witzig, Richard, and Massiel Ascencios. 1999. The road to indigenous extinction: Case study of resource exportation, disease importation, and human rights violations against the Urarina in the Peruvian Amazon. Health and Human Rights 4(1): 60–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Wolf, Eric. 1982. Europe and the people without history. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar