Blanco-Wells, Gustavo and Libuy, Macarena and Harambour, Alberto and Rodríguez, Karina (2021) Plagues, past, and futures for the yagan canoe people of Cape Horn, Southern Chile. Maritime Studies, Vol.20. pp. 101-113. ISSN 2212-9790
Full text not available from this repository. (Request a copy)Abstract
The manner in which the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the indigenous Yagan people of Navarino Island in southern Chile is the topic of this paper. Like other First Nation communities, these nomadic people suffered decimation and disease in successive encounters with Europeans, and then, in the mid-twentieth century, forced sedentarization by the Chilean State. More recently, the Yagan have fought the expansion of salmon aquaculture to the Island. Making use of a sociomaterial approach, we examine how the threat of past and present viruses and diseases, added to the tragic effects of colonization, become part of a broader sociohistorical debate on the right of coastal peoples to their maritories. Paradoxically, our results suggest that COVID-19 has become part of an assemblage of ethnic revitalization, opening possibilities for the Yagan clans to make some of their envisioned futures possible.
Item Type: | Articles |
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Keywords: | Canoe, Chile, Covid, Indigenous People, Fishing Communities, Disease, Europe, Salmon, Coastal Communities, Yagan |
Subjects: | Disasters and Climate Change |
Depositing User: | Jeeva ICSF Rajan |
Date Deposited: | 08 Jun 2022 07:23 |
Last Modified: | 08 Jun 2022 07:23 |
URI: | http://icsfarchives.net/id/eprint/17002 |
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