CrossRef Open Access 2026 1 sitasi

Body-Land: Embodied Memory, Coloniality, and Resurgence Across Abya Yala and Turtle Island

Nathalie Lozano Neira

Abstrak

This essay theorizes the body-land, a living site where colonial violence, displacement, and resurgence converge through a hemispheric dialogue between Indigenous and decolonial feminisms from Abya Yala and Turtle Island. Drawing on Lorena Cabnal’s concept of the body-land as the primary terrain of colonial invasion and regeneration, María Lugones’s analysis of the coloniality of gender as a system that fractures body, land, and relations, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson’s theory of embodied relational resurgence, and Diana Taylor’s notion of the repertoire as embodied memory beyond the archive, the essay argues that silence, gesture, and affect function as insurgent practices of knowledge transmission that contest colonial modes of erasure. Through an autoethnographic narrative spanning displacement from Villarrica, Tolima, and re-rooting on the territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm, Sḵwx̱wú7mesh, and səlilwətaɬ Nations, the analysis traces how colonial grammars of race, gender, and territory are inscribed in the body. Yet these embodied inscriptions also generate practices of resurgence. By bringing Cabnal, Lugones, Simpson, and Taylor into direct conversation, the essay demonstrates that resurgence must be understood as an embodied, relational, and hemispheric process, one in which the body becomes a generative territory for reimagining belonging and repairing the fractures of colonial modernity.

Penulis (1)

N

Nathalie Lozano Neira

Format Sitasi

Neira, N.L. (2026). Body-Land: Embodied Memory, Coloniality, and Resurgence Across Abya Yala and Turtle Island. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy10010009

Akses Cepat

PDF tidak tersedia langsung

Cek di sumber asli →
Lihat di Sumber doi.org/10.3390/genealogy10010009
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2026
Bahasa
en
Total Sitasi
Sumber Database
CrossRef
DOI
10.3390/genealogy10010009
Akses
Open Access ✓