Institute for Ethnographic Research (IFER) a part of the George Washington University
Doi
Abstract
Prompted by tourist commentary that describes an Emberá community in
Panama as “inauthentic” or “invented,” I examine the limitations of these
concepts when used to refer to cultural practices of indigenous communities.
To escape from a limiting, singular vision of authenticity, I argue,
attention should be paid to the multiple and overlapping meanings of the
authentic as these are negotiated in particular contexts. In the case of
Emberá indigenous tourism, the tourists’ search for an authenticity uncorrupted
by modernity inspires indigenous articulations of the authentic
related to diverse sets of cultural practices not only in the past, but also in
the present. Acknowledging this complexity can set us free from the trap
of a singularly conceived authenticity