3 research outputs found

    Making Culture: Social Movements, Culture, and Food Not Bombs

    No full text
    This dissertation combines insights from the production of culture perspective with the multi-institutional politics approach to social movements to investigate cultural challenges produced by social movement actors in the context of Food Not Bombs activism. First, it broadly demonstrates the utility of using the production of culture perspective to investigate various organizational features and shared understandings and how they shape the culture produced by members of Food Not Bombs. Next, it tracks how Food Not Bombs activists\u27 collective understanding of power and domination shapes their political practice as one that is diffuse and rhizomatic. Finally, it traces how participants in Food Not Bombs activism allow their commitment to direct action strategies to shape their engagement with other area collectives, as well as how it influences their strategic use of rights discourse.

    Identity is an Infinite Now: Being Instead of Becoming Gallina

    No full text
    Archaeological research on the Gallina (AD 1100–1300) inhabitants of the region west of the Rio Chama and centered on the Llaves valley has focused on constructing a culture history and examining functional characteristics of artifacts and architecture. Limited research has attempted to understand who the residents of the Gallina heartland were. In this article, using new findings and historical contexts, we argue that the Gallina people had a complicated identity forged around resistance and a deep connection to their past. To better understand them we need to move past previous binary categories used to describe them and perceive them not as isolated or connected, aggressors or victims, traditionalists or innovators, but as an intersectional mix of these axes of identity.La investigación arqueológica sobre los habitantes Gallina (1100–1300 d. C.) de la región oeste del Río Chama, focalizada en el valle de Llaves, se orientó en la construcción de una historia cultural y el análisis de las características funcionales de los artefactos y la arquitectura. De hecho, han sido escasas las investigaciones que han intentado entender quiénes eran los residentes del Gallina. En este artículo, utilizando nuevos hallazgos y contextos históricos, argumentamos que los grupos Gallina tuvieron una identidad compleja, forjada en torno a la resistencia y a una profunda conexión con su historia. Asimismo, para entenderlas necesitamos movernos más allá de las tradicionales categorías binarias usadas para interpretarlos y percibirlos como aislados o conectados, violentos o víctimas, tradicionalistas o inventores, y en cambio, como una mezcla que abarca todos estos ejes de identidad.Archaeology of the America
    corecore