Periodic Reporting for period 1 - NAMELESS-STORIES (The Invisible Women: Nameless and Forgotten Stories of the Rubber Boom (Bolivian Amazonia, 19-20th centuries))
Período documentado: 2021-12-01 hasta 2023-11-30
The multidisciplinary approach aimed at two specific objectives: 1) The creation of an open access web archive that rendered information accessible to the general public: historical archives, documentary sources, ethnographic data, unpublished texts, and little-known pictures of ‘rubber women’. 2) A critical re-reading of the historical, journalistic and literary sources that revalued the multiple modalities of female involvement in the extractive endeavour. The aim was to articulate archive data with an updated ethnographic perspective that reconstructed the oral memories and life-stories of ‘rubber women’ through a varied continuum of relations that ranged from barter to wage labour, from marriage alliance to ‘compadrazgo’ (fictive kinship), and from commerce to sexual violence, kidnapping and even enslavement.
Reconstructing, contextualising and disseminating the histories of these ‘rubber women’ not only is crucial to render their testimony visible in the historical archive, but also to empower their descendants. In this way, the reconstruction of female agency allows to contribute updated elements of reflection to gender studies and, at the same, time to open the way towards a fairer, more inclusive and comprehensive view of a crucial period in Amazonian, Bolivian and South American history.
During the action I carried on successfully two periods of ethnographic fieldwork in Bolivia with Indigenous, Creole and Immigrant groups, and also ethnohistorical research in several private and public archives. At the same time, I have been involved in teaching and advising activities in Venice, Buenos Aires and Cochabamba at high school, graduate and postdoctoral levels. I have also acquired transferable skills such as digital repository design and above all knowledge of Italian language thanks to continuous training at the Ca’ Foscari School for International Education, where after 24 months I reached a C2 competence level.
During February 2022 I coordinated an international seminar in Venice (‘Radiography of Extractive Spaces’) that involved anthropologists, historians and geographers from Italy, France, USA, Argentina and Spain, and in February 2023 a second international workshop (‘The South American Lowlands as Anthropological Object: A look from Extractivism and Mechanisation’) with colleagues from Italy, France and USA. During May 2023, I organized as well a third Workshop in France entitled ‘Gérer ses données avec le logiciel heurist et l’entrepot Nakala’ at Rennes University.
- February 2022: ‘Radiography of Extractive Spaces’. Ca’ Foscari University. Paper: ‘Storie dimenticate: le donne del tempo del caucciù (1880-1920)’.
- February 2022: ‘Antropologia al singolare: storie minori nelle terre basse sudamericane’, Bologna University. Paper: ‘La reina del Orthon: una dama europea en el imperio gomero’.
- May 2022: ‘Il Silenzio delle Ragazze. Leggere le donne’, Bologna University. Paper: ‘An Ethnographic Case: Invisible Women in the History of Elastic Rubber’.
- June 2022: ‘Presentazione progetti Marie Curie 2019-2020’, Ca’ Foscari University. Paper: ‘Nameless-Stories: Invisible and Forgotten Stories of the Rubber Boom (Bolivian Amazonia)’.
- January 2023: ‘La velocidad de los mundos lentos: accidentes, máquinas y sociedades en América del Sur’, Maison de Sciences de l’homme de Bretagne. Paper: ‘La tragedia del Adolfito, o de cómo un naufragio cambió la historia amazónica’.
- February 2023: ‘Las Tierras Bajas Sudamericanas como objeto antropológico: una mirada desde el extractivismo y la mecanización’, Ca’ Foscari University. Paper: ‘The Invisible Women’.
- May 2023: ‘Atelier Humanités Numériques’, Rennes Univesity. Presentation: ‘Gérer ses données avec le logiciel heurist et l’entrepot Nakala’.
- June 2023: ‘II International Congress of Digital Humanities’, Catholic University of Ávila. Paper: ‘De la investigación antropológica al repositorio abierto de materiales científicos’.
By reconstructing the agency and experiences of ‘rubber women’, the project outcomes not only offer updated comparative insight to the contemporary analysis of intersectional relations between gender, ethnicity, class, and personal, collective or regional affiliation, but also render ‘rubber women’s testimony visible in the historical record and help to empower their descendants and groups of origin, thus contributing to forge the path towards a more fair and inclusive history of Bolivia, Amazonia, and South America.