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+====1 The idea of the indigenous people as “protectors of the environment” creates a Westernized, essentialized stereotype.==== |
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+Fabricant 13: Fabricant, Nicole. "Good living for whom? Bolivia’s climate justice movement and the limitations of indigenous cosmovisions." Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies 8.2 (2013): 159-178 |
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+This performance of |
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+AND |
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+the climate crisis. |
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+====2 Their representations of indigenous people as having a pre-development way of life symbolically affirms the West as superior.==== |
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+Minssieux 13:(Nelly Minssieux, Milene Minssieux and Kristoffer Sidenius) “The Impact of Essentialist Representations on the Native American in a Postcolonial Context” Project Report – Cultural Encounters, Fall 2013 – Supervisor: Prem Poddar, Senior Fellow at Zentrum Moderner Orient cultural and historical research institute |
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+The postcolonial subject |
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+AND |
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+of the West. |
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+====That’s a voting issue – question their reps before the passage of the plan – they do not get to weigh the case.==== |
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+====The impacts come first – decolonization requires the resistance to be symbolic – their reps SHAPE understanding of colonialism.==== |
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+Minssieux 13 (Nelly Minssieux, Milene Minssieux and Kristoffer Sidenius) “The Impact of Essentialist Representations on the Native American in a Postcolonial Context” Project Report – Cultural Encounters, Fall 2013 – Supervisor: Prem Poddar, Senior Fellow at Zentrum Moderner Orient cultural and historical research institute |
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+ |
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+Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie and |
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+AND |
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+a symbolic level. |