Habitar la frontera: el capitalismo en la trama de la vida y los aportes de Jason Moore, para repensar nuestras luchas

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Marianela Gamboa
Luciana Fernández
Jorgelina Beatriz Bertea

Abstract

Review of Navarro, M. and Machado Aráoz, H. (comps.) (2020). The fabric of life at the threshold of the Capitalocene. The thought of Jason W. Moore. Mexico: Bajo Tierra A.C. Digital Book. Digital Archive: download and online. ISBN 978-607-98901-3-1


Historicizing the fabric of life to understand the rise of capitalism and its crises.

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How to Cite
Gamboa, M., Fernández, L., & Bertea, J. B. (2021). Habitar la frontera: el capitalismo en la trama de la vida y los aportes de Jason Moore, para repensar nuestras luchas. Heterotopías, 4(8), 1–8. Retrieved from https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/heterotopias/article/view/35981
Section
Reseñas
Author Biographies

Marianela Gamboa, CONICET - UNCa

Researcher and lesbian feminist anti-extractivist activist. BA in Archaeology (UNCa), CONICET doctoral fellow and PhD student in Human Sciences (UNCa). Diploma in Gender and Feminisms (UBA). Teacher at tertiary level, at the Institute of Art and Communication of the province of Catamarca. She is currently working on issues related to patriarchal-colonial-capitalist violence and the advance of mining extractivism, from the case of Minera Alumbrera and its impacts on the practices of care and re-production of life, from a feminist perspective in the territory. She has been a member of transdisciplinary research teams since 2010, plurinational and international networks of environmental activism and critical thinking, such as the feminist collective of RIDAP (Network of information and discussion on archeology and heritage). She is a member of the social organizations: PURCARÁ (Catamarca peoples in resistance and self-determination); the Feminist Observatory of Catamarca and the Network of Anti-extractivist Feminists of the South. E-mail: mariugamb@hotmail.com

Luciana Fernández, EdA, UNCA

She has a degree in Anthropology (EdA, UNCA) and works as a teacher of Cultural Management in the Technicatura de Bienes Culturales, belonging to the Instituto Superior de Arte y Comunicación de la prov. de Catamarca. As a teacher for Primary Education, she worked in different rural schools in the country and developed several proposals for popular education related to environmental issues. Since 2019 she is part of the technical team that accompanies the Atacameños del Altiplano Native Community, resident in the Salar del Hombre Muerto, depto. Antofagasta de la Sierra, Catamarca, in the framework of the territorial defense process that this community has been carrying out, in the face of the advance of extractivism represented by water mega-mining, which aims to appropriate community territories to extract lithium from the salt flats, putting at risk the continuity of life in the region. He lives in the Sierra de Ancasti, and is a member of the Ancasti por la Vida Assembly, as well as the PUCARA Provincial Assembly.

E-mail: luferanqui@gmail.com

Jorgelina Beatriz Bertea, UNC

Degree in Geography with orientation in Environmental and Territorial Management (UNC). Teacher of Third Cycle of EGB and Polimodal Education in Geography (IES Simón Bolívar). She is a teacher specialist in Higher Education and ICT (INFD). She has worked as a teacher in public secondary and tertiary institutions in the province of Córdoba. She is a CONICET doctoral fellow whose research topic deals with the territorial dynamics that arise in areas close to mega-mining projects, the case of Andalgalá, province of Catamarca. Member of Research Teams since 2011. She is currently part of the Study Group on Everyday Spaces and Memories. She is a member of the Project in charge of the director Dr. Silvia Carina Valiente: The coloniality of nature in peripheral spaces of global capitalism. The production of "other" knowledge as practices of re-existence in Andalgalá. Catamarca, Argentina.

E-mail: jorgelina.bertea@mi.unc.edu.arcokibertea@gmail.com