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Places to Think With, Books to Think About: Words, Experience and the Decolonization of Knowledge in the Bolivian Andes

Author

  • Anders Burman

Summary, in English

Drawing on his anthropological field work in Bolivia in the midst of profound social and political change, the author examines the attitudes of various interlocutors toward knowledge, and in particular the important differences between “hegemonic theories of knowledge and indigenous epistemologies, between propositional and non-propositional knowledge, between knowledge of the world and knowledge from within the world, or between representationalist

and relational ways of knowing.” He stresses that there is “no absolute dividing line,” no “clear-cut dichotomies after almost 500 years of asymmetric and colonial intermingling of epistemologies and knowledge systems from different traditions.” Nonetheless, relational ways of knowing and indigenous traditions of thought continue to be systematically treated as inferior. However, they are still present and are currently making themselves felt at the university.

Department/s

Publishing year

2012

Language

English

Pages

101-119

Publication/Series

Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge

Volume

10

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

OKCIR: The Omar Khayyam Center for Integrative Research in Utopia, Mysticism, and Science

Topic

  • Social and Economic Geography

Keywords

  • indigenous knowledge
  • decolonization of knowledge
  • Aymara
  • Bolivia
  • indigenous universities
  • epistemology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1540-5699