Land's Language

On Mapuche Memory, Translation, and the Territorial Aporia

Ethan Madarieta author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Northwestern University Press

Published:30th Apr '26

£96.00

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Land's Language cover

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.

"Land's Language is beautifully written, theoretically nuanced, and committed to an ethical approach to Indigenous studies. A welcome addition to Abiayalan Indigenous studies, Madarieta has brought together literary analysis, philosophical inquiry, and a specifically Mapuche mode of reading that is innovative and hopeful." —Joseph M. Pierce, Cherokee Nation Citizen, Stony Brook University

"Madarieta's remarkable book is an incisive elaboration of the ways in which, in the context of the Mapuche movement, language, written poetry and political activism incite us to think and historicize the ontological, epistemic, cultural and political crossroads of the struggle for the Mapu as land and as life in times of colonial racial capitalism. Madarieta offers neatly woven critical reflections, compellingly foregrounded in his axial notion of territorial aporia. His contributions emerge from a philosophical immersion in the language that the Mapuche speak, Mapudungun (Language of the Land), to reveal its liberatory mnemonic, epistemic, and territorial force, although aporetically strained and mediated by today's destructively dominant 'world.'" —Luis E. Cárcamo-Huechante, University of Texas at Austin

ISBN: 9798899480102

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 454g

352 pages