Publication: Ancones de pesca en Taganga: representaciones simbólicas y disputas por el maritorio
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Meneses Jaramillo, César Augusto
Londoño-Vanegas, Ana Milena
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Ediciones Universidad Autónoma de Chile / Enredars-Universidad Pablo de Olavide
Abstract
Este trabajo realiza un análisis de las relaciones simbólicas entre pescadores-pescadoras de la comunidad de Taganga en el departamento de Magdalena con los espacios que habitan y de los que hacen uso para la subsistencia. Se trata de un ejercicio etnográfico que, si bien describe usos y costumbres en torno a este maritorio, también devela tensiones y relaciones de poder que se dan entre las comunidades, las oleadas de turistas y las instituciones, lo que supone movimientos sociales en defensa del maritorio y sus representaciones simbólicas. Es un breve acercamiento etnográfico a un fenómeno cultural de sumo interés para la antropología y los Estudios Culturales en la medida que devela las tensiones en torno a las dinámicas de expolio y desterritorialización asociadas con el desarrollo. Por último, el capítulo expone las múltiples formas de entender el maritorio en clave de apropiación del espacio.
This paper analyzes the symbolic relationships between fishermen-fisherwomen of the Taganga community, in the department of Magdalena, and the spaces they inhabit and use for subsistence. This is an ethnographic exercise that, while describing uses and customs around this maritorio, also reveals tensions and power relations between the communities, the waves of tourists and the institutions, which implies social movements in defense of the maritorio and its symbolic representations. It is a brief ethnographic approach to a cultural phenomenon of great interest for anthropology and Cultural Studies, as it reveals the tensions surrounding the dynamics of dispossession and deterritorialization associated with development. Finally, the chapter presents the multiple ways of understanding the maritime landscape in terms of spatial appropriation.
This paper analyzes the symbolic relationships between fishermen-fisherwomen of the Taganga community, in the department of Magdalena, and the spaces they inhabit and use for subsistence. This is an ethnographic exercise that, while describing uses and customs around this maritorio, also reveals tensions and power relations between the communities, the waves of tourists and the institutions, which implies social movements in defense of the maritorio and its symbolic representations. It is a brief ethnographic approach to a cultural phenomenon of great interest for anthropology and Cultural Studies, as it reveals the tensions surrounding the dynamics of dispossession and deterritorialization associated with development. Finally, the chapter presents the multiple ways of understanding the maritime landscape in terms of spatial appropriation.




