“This is an example not only for their Qom race but for all the youth of Formosa”. Cultural heritage and indigenous music in Formosa’s controversial politics

  • Silvia Citro Universidad de Buenos Aires, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras / CONICET
  • Soledad Torres Agüero
Keywords: Cultural Policies, Intangible Cultural Heritage, Formosa, Indigenous Music, Toba

Abstract

We analyze recent cultural policy in the province of Formosa, Argentina, regarding indigenous intangible cultural heritage, particularly the music of the Toba or Qom. Our hypothesis is that the provincial government has strategically instrumentalized these cultural policies in order to create the image of an administration that ideologically endorses global discourses imposed on democracies (such as “multiculturalism” and “the safeguarding of cultural heritage”). At the same time this legitimizes a provincial imaginary of “being Formoseño” that identifies itself as “multicultural” but on the other hand invisibilizes contemporary indigenous people, masking conflicts and inequalities.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Silvia Citro, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras / CONICET
Dra. en Antropolgía (UBA), Prof. Adjunta e Investigadora Adjunta CONICET, FFyL, UBA, donde coordina el equipo de investigación de Antropología del Cuerpo y la Performance (www.antropologiadelcuerpo.com).
Soledad Torres Agüero
Prof. en Cs. Antropológicas, Maestranda en Antropología Social (UBA), e investigadora de proyectos UBACYT en el equipo de investigación de Antropología del Cuerpo y la Performance.
Published
2012-12-30
How to Cite
Citro, S., & Agüero, S. T. (2012). “This is an example not only for their Qom race but for all the youth of Formosa”. Cultural heritage and indigenous music in Formosa’s controversial politics. RUNA, Archivo Para Las Ciencias Del Hombre, 33(2), 157-174. https://doi.org/10.34096/runa.v33i2.345
Section
Espacio Abierto - Artículos Originales