Abstract

Transnational economic dynamics in which China is increasingly a pacesetter have been widely analyzed as macro-structural processes, rather than in the territories, lives, and bodies of those who experience their effects in an intimate way. This article charts the experiences of Indigenous girls from the Multi-Ethnic Indigenous Territory (TIM) in the Bolivian Amazon undergoing the construction of a highway by a Chinese company. I analyze the collective feminist body-mapping of three cuerpo-territorio maps made by Indigenous girls about the transformations brought by ­infrastructural development in their territory. This community-centered approach employs body-maps to trace the girls’ feelings of joy, hope, fear, and sorrow as affective navigational coordinates of their community. Putting Indigenous feminist theory in conversation with scholarship on the affective turn and feminist political ecology, I argue for an understanding of cuerpo-territorio as an amalgamation in which Cartesian notions of internal/external, reason/emotion, and objective/subjective are destabilized. This case study centers sensible and extra-linguistic registers to attend to the affective circulations of embodied spatialities that are of interest to feminist and Indigenous geographies. Interrogating the embodied geographies interwoven in global dynamics of power from the girls’ partial perspectives, this article interrupts monolithic accounts of life in the Amazon during construction, and traces a spatial roadmap of living relationally with territory instead.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call