Kaingang's well-being as a counterpoint to coloniality and development

Authors

  • Eliana Piaia Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná
  • Josiane Karine Wedig Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-6568/2022-N62-1626

Keywords:

Colonialism, intersectionality, decolonial perspective, indigenous resistance.

Abstract

This article analyzes the aspects that constituted colonialism and the coloniality of power; knowledge and being, and how this model continues to operate in the hegemonic logic of development, where gender, race, and class have been established as the basis for the hierarchization and classification of people, a process in which the women from these colonized peoples have been the most subordinated. The Kaingang’s well-living, on the other hand, presents a different style. It is the Kaingang women from the Mangueirinha Indigenous land, in Paraná, who criticize the violence suffered due to development policies upon their territory, through their practices and narratives. This article is based on an ethnographic research conducted on them, between 2017 and 2021.

 

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Author Biography

Josiane Karine Wedig, Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná

Assistente Social, funcionária pública no município de Chopinzinho  - PR desde 2011, com especialização em Direito e Políticas Públicas pela Universidade do Centro Oeste do Paraná, mestranda em Desenvolvimento Regional pela Universidade Téecnológica Federal do Paraná.

Published

2022-04-28

How to Cite

Piaia, E., & Wedig, J. K. (2022). Kaingang’s well-being as a counterpoint to coloniality and development. Polis (Santiago), 21(62). https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-6568/2022-N62-1626