Results 201 to 210 of about 12,522 (254)
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Lettered Aymara

2023
Shifting from urban metropole to rural hinterland, chapter 2 resituates the social meaning of Indigenous education in the context of escalating legal battles between Aymara communities and the oligarchic state over communal landholding rights. Borrowing the ethnographic concept of “situated literacy,” the chapter insists that the currency of rural ...
openaire   +2 more sources

La conformación de la frontera chileno-boliviana y los campesinos aymaras durante la chilenización (Tarapacá, 1895-1929)

open access: yesHistoria Critica, 2014
Through administrative documentation, and in the context of the chilenization of the region of Tarapaca and the new demarcation of the border between Chile and Bolivia between the 1890s and the 1920s, this article describes and analyzes the difficulties ...
C. Castro
exaly   +2 more sources

Language revitalization as a postponed aspiration: anti-essentialist ethnolinguistic identity among Aymaras in Bolivia

International Journal of the Sociology of Language
Twenty-first century Bolivia witnessed indigenous resurgence and state promotion of indigenous languages. This article ethnographically examines the impact of these processes on indigenous language revitalization and ethnolinguistic identities in urban ...
Tathagatan Ravindran
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Aymara children of Bolivia

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1963
The Aymara, an Indian tribe inhabiting the uplands and constitution approximately half the Bolivian population, have tenaciously preserved their own rural culture although adapting to the Spanish and Western cultures imposed upon them. In their highland world, diet is meager, maternal and child mortality high, and life expectancy low, but family ...
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Quechua and Aymara

Language Sciences, 1987
Abstract The similarities which have been cited as evidence of genetic relationship between Quechua and Aymara do not extend to all varieties of Quechua — nor to two languages closely related to Aymara. Proto-Quechua and Proto-Jaqi (the immediate ancestor of Aymara) are much more divergent than their commonly compared descendants. This, together with
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The Aymara: History and Worldview

The Journal of American Folklore, 1966
THE HISTORY that happens to a people is partly a matter of their ethos and world, view since, in fact, it is people who make history happen; that is to say, every social group, in its reaction to the world and to other social groups, must inevitably contribute its own peculiar stamp to the historical transaction.
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THE GOSPEL AND THE AYMARA CULTURE

International Review of Mission, 1995
I want to begin by defining the term dialogue as an action that is undertaken by two or more persons for the purpose of achieving an end to a dispute or misunderstanding, or to strengthen an existing relationship. Experience shows that anything new to be adopted into the individual's and community's life means changes in the relationships between ...
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Aymara

2023
Hatangadi, Meera   +2 more
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Aymara Inflection

2015
This contribution describes nominal and verbal inflection in Aymara, an isolate SOV language with a modifier-head word order spoken mainly in Peru and Bolivia. Given its highly agglutinative nature and rich morphology, Aymara provides an interesting perspective from which to study inflection.
openaire   +1 more source

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