Wild, Indigenous, Lame, Invalid: Anti-Ableist Epistemologies of the South

datacite.alternateIdentifier.citationSAUDE E SOCIEDADE,Vol.32,2023
datacite.alternateIdentifier.doi10.1590/S0104-12902023211010en
datacite.creatorPino-Moran, Juan Andres
datacite.creatorRodriguez-Garrido, Pia
datacite.creatorLapierre, Michelle
datacite.date2023
datacite.subject.englishEpistemology
datacite.subject.englishDisability
datacite.subject.englishFeminism
datacite.subject.englishInterculturality
datacite.subject.englishAbleism
datacite.titleWild, Indigenous, Lame, Invalid: Anti-Ableist Epistemologies of the South
dc.date.accessioned2024-05-27T18:26:06Z
dc.date.available2024-05-27T18:26:06Z
dc.description.abstractThe aim of the article was to present a first approach to an epistemological proposal that reflects on and deals with the construction and legitimation of knowledge generated from abject, abnormal, or crippled corporeities geopolitically located in the South. It pays special attention to the sex-gender-ability system in the social and epistemological organization of knowledge. In this development, we identify a positionality and wasted wealth for regional social analysis and transformation as a result of a modern colonial order. Hence, this proposal is inscribed within the Latin American critical thinking to reflect on those other places of abject enunciation.
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositoriodigital.uct.cl/handle/10925/5664
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUNIV SAO PAULO. FAC SAUDE PUBLICA
dc.sourceSAUDE E SOCIEDADE
oaire.resourceTypeArticle
uct.indizacionSSCI
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