Indigenism and exclusion

Authors

  • José Angel Vera Noriega Universidad de Sonora

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35197/rx.02.03.2006.07.jv

Keywords:

indigenism, exclusion, regional development, hermeneutics

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to carry out an analysis of the Western view of indigenous peoples from the perspective of the four types of exclusion that Foucault (1978)1 talks about when he refers to madness: social or work exclusion, family or emotional exclusion, symbolic or linguistic exclusion, and playful or image exclusion. It is a reflection and transformation of ideas that allow both worlds to coexist by playing the game of power where the most important thing is not who wins or who loses, but rather the imagination and creativity to modify the order of the rules and norms for this game of power. The concepts of territory, medicine and religion are discussed and exemplified. The discussion is in terms of equity and equality policies in a pertinent and relevant dialogue for the construction of possible alliances.

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References

Foucault M. (1978) La folie et la societé. En Foucault, M. Y Watanabe, M. Tetsu gaku no butai. A shai-shuppansha pag. 63-76.

Focault M. (1978) La folie et la societé. En Foucault, M. Y Watanabe, M. Tetsu gaku no butai. A shai-shuppansha pag. 63-76.

Published

2006-12-31

How to Cite

Vera Noriega, J. A. (2006). Indigenism and exclusion. Revista Ra Ximhai , 2(3), 677–681. https://doi.org/10.35197/rx.02.03.2006.07.jv

Issue

Section

Artículos científicos