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Estudios sociológicos
versión On-line ISSN 2448-6442versión impresa ISSN 0185-4186
Resumen
BAUTISTA PEREZ, Judith. Everyday Strategies: Indigenous Professionals’ Responses to Anti-Indigenous Racism in Mexico. Estud. sociol [online]. 2022, vol.40, n.spe, pp.57-85. Epub 22-Sep-2023. ISSN 2448-6442. https://doi.org/10.24201/es.2022v40nespecial.2083.
Everyday resistance strategies: Indigenous professionals’ responses to anti-indigenous racism in Mexico. Despite an increasing public and academic attention to racism in Mexico, we still need to build a consistent understanding that racism is a system that has historically organized and distributed privileges and power in multiple ways. It continues to be difficult to recognize anti-indigenous racism as a social fact and as an important category for academic analysis. Indigenous people make decisions and design strategies to survive racism in each case or situation. Here I present an analysis of the strategies that professional Indigenous people have developed to endure, challenge and contest racism. I have organized these strategies under the categories of: assimilation, double effort, negation and confrontation. These strategies derive from a critique of the social tendency to limit racism to individual experiences since this position results in an isolated and emptied interpretation of social and historical content. In addition, through testimonies of Indigenous men and women I present an argument against underestimating the consequences of racism in the lives of disadvantaged racialized subjects.
Palabras llave : anti-Indigenous racism; experiences of racism; resistance strategies; consequences of racism.