Land's Language

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A01=Ethan Madarieta
Abya Yala
Afropessimism
appropriation
Argentina
Author_Ethan Madarieta
Basque
Black Skin
Category=JBSL
Category=JBSL11
Category=JHMC
Celestino Cordova
Champurria
Chile
colonialism
Critical Ethnic Studies
Critical Indigenous studies
Critical Theory
David Aninir
decolonial theory
decoloniality
decolonization
Elicura Chihuailaf
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Euskadi
Fanon City Meu
forthcoming
Frank Wilderson III
Frantz Fanon
Hector Mariano
Hunger Strikes
Indigenous Epistemologies
Indigenous Pessimism
Indigenous theory
Interpretation
Intertextualty
Jaime Luis Huenun
Jodi Byrd
Land
Land Back
Latin America
Latin American history
Latin American studies
Liliana Ancalao
Locality
Machi
Mapuche
Mapudungun
Memory
Memory studies
Mestizaje
Oraltura
Poetry
Postcolony
Roxana Rupailaf
Semiotics
Settler colonialism
Settler state
Territorial Aporia
Territorial rights
Territory
Translation
Translation studies
Translation theory
Wallmapu
White Masks

Product details

  • ISBN 9798899480096
  • Weight: 513g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: Northwestern University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Presenting a new framework for understanding indigeneity and Indigenous peoples' demands for territorial restitution

Asserting that the work of critical theory today must attend to an epistemic locality rather than the universalizing impulse of its European intellectual genealogy, Ethan Madarieta makes central to his study the literatures and philosophy of the Mapuche peoples of Wallmapu (comprising south-central regions of what are currently known as Chile and Argentina). In doing so, he argues that the primary site of settler and Indigenous antagonisms is not "land," as is ubiquitously asserted, but the overlapping and incommensurate conceptual orders within which land and body are constituted and accrue meaning.

Land's Language works to unsettle the stability and universality of how land and body are understood by calling into question what can or will be restored or returned and to whom. Drawing on Latin American and Mapuche historical, philosophical, and literary studies in dialogue with global critical theory and Anglophone critical Indigenous studies, this book demonstrates how Mapuche knowledge and thought, and that of each Indigenous nation across the planet, offer ways to live in ethical relation beyond that of the state and under the wider systemic hegemony of colonial racial capitalism.

Ethan Madarieta is an assistant professor of English at Syracuse University, where he is on faculty in Native American and Indigenous studies, Latin American and Caribbean studies, and more.

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