Season 4 / Episode 4

In this episode, Natalia Hernandez Somarriba, a second-year PhD student in Modern Languages, compares two texts by Peruvian authors that address the broad context of unequal social relations within post-colonial Peru, as well as between Peru and Europe as a former colonial power. The first is the neo-indigenista novel Los ríos profundos (1958) by José María Arguedas; the second is the autofictional contemporary novel Huaco retrato (2021) by Gabriela Wiener. Published fifty years apart, reading these works in dialogue highlights how issues of mestizo identities, social conflict, and systemic oppression of different communities have shifted both in Peru and within former colonial powers.

Drawing on decolonial, feminist, and posthumanist theoretical approaches, Natalia first examines how movement interacts with and shapes the narrator-protagonists’ identities, allowing them to foster empathy for themselves and others. Secondly, she demonstrates how Ernesto and Gabriela engage in decolonial practices that resist and disobey established structures of power. It is through these acts of disobedience that the characters ultimately develop relational and multifaceted understandings of identity. They critique and subvert not only the status quo imposed on marginalised groups through the legacy of coloniality and nation-states, but also the role and position of white-mestizo subjects within their respective societies.

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References

Arguedas, José María. 1978. Deep Rivers (Austin: University of Texas Press).
Galindo, María. 2021. Feminismo Bastardo (Mujeres creando).
Hartman, Saidiya. 2008. ‘Venus in Two Acts’, Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism, 12: 1–14.
Lander, Edgardo. 2002. ‘Eurocentrism, Modern Knowledges, and the “Natural” Order of Global Capital’, Nepantla: Views from South, 3: 245–68.
Mignolo, Walter D., and Catherine E. Walsh. 2018. On Decoloniality: Concepts, Analytics, Praxis (Durham: Duke University Press).
Miller, Marilyn Grace. 2004. Rise and Fall of the Cosmic Race: The Cult of Mestizaje in Latin America (New York: University of Texas Press).
Quijano, Aníbal. 1992. ‘Colonialidad y modernidad/racionalidad’, Perú Indígena, 13: 11–20.
______. 2010. ‘Coloniality and Modernity/Rationality’, in Walter D. Mignolo and Arturo Escobar (eds), Globalization and the Decolonial Option (London: Routledge).
Wiener, Charles, and Edgardo Rivera Martínez. 1993. “Perú y Bolivia. Relato de viaje.” Lima: Institut français d’études andines.
Wiener, Gabriela. 2023. Undiscovered (London: Puhkin Press).
Zapata, Milagros, and David Swerdlow. 1998. ‘Framing the Peruvian Cholo: Popular Art by Unpopular People’, in Eva P. Bueno and Terry Caesar (eds), Imagination beyond Nation: Latin American Popular Culture (Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press).