Polir~al Geo&mqhy, Vol. 17, No. 3, pp. 273-293, 1998 0 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd Printed in Great Britain. All rights reserved 0962-6298/98 $19.00 + 0.00
Pergamon
PII: SO%2-6298(%)00085-6
Frontiers and popular nationhood: geographies of identity in the 1995 Ecuador-Peru border dispute SAKAH
Department
of Geography,
A.
RADCLIFFE
University of Cambridge, Downing CB2 3EN, UK
Place, Cambridge
ABSTKACX Drawing on substantive work on Ecuadorian national identities, an examination is made of the multiple geographies of identities which were articulated and negotiated during the border dispute between Ecuador and Peru in January and February 1995, an incident which became known as Tiwintza. While territorial claims and border protocols (particularly the 1942 Rio Protocol) form a significant geography of identity through which state-initiated nationbuilding imaginative geographies are articulated, these are not the only geographies imagined and expressed by citizens during and around the of of to a theoretical consideration of relations between dominant and popular imaginative geographies and national identities. The particular situation of the Shuar-Achuar indigenous groups, and of a of of 0 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved Kwwo~rx: identity, nationhood,
In late January
Andes, border disputes. Ecuador, Peru
1995, a series of
of of in an
is There
were
dispute
immediate
at this
a low mountain
political
particular
time,
and due
military
interests
to declining
of
range,
the Cordillera de1 Condoor:
involved public
in the eruption
support
for
both
of the national
presidents. While the motivations of the major decision-makers in this dispute remain sketchy, these political actors were able to mobilize the population around issues of territory,
nationhood
and the Amazon
in ways which
can throw
light on the nature
of
national identities and their relationship with place. The boundary particularly in dispute in 1995 totalled around 100 km yet to be ‘satisfactorily’ marked with agreed marker posts according
to the Ecuadoreans.
The aim of this paper
in popular senses of nationhood understandings of identity, place
and identity, and nation.
is to examine and
the
what the border
implications
of this
means for our
Frontiers and popular nationhood
274
FIGURE1. Ecuador, showing
-=-*-I
International boundary
-----Area
in Peru claimed by Ecuador
-
Province boundary
major cities and regions
According to Ecuadorean official sources, from autumn 1994 and particularly from early January 1995, there were an increasing number of incursions by Peruvian troops into an Ecuadorean area of the undelimited zone of the Cordillera de1 Condor; at the headwaters of the Rio Cenepa, which leads to the Marafion River and then to the Amazon. Ecuadorean sources vigorously denied a Peruvian statement accusing their armed forces of attacking Peruvian positions from a helicopter in the last few days of January. The Peruvian version of events highlights a specific time-period. On the 9th and 11th January 1995, according to official statements, Ecuadorean and Peruvian patrols exchanged fire. Following this, the Ecuadoreans are claimed to have for the first time recognized the Rio Protocol agreement of January 1942. Peru in its communiqu6 on the 29th January acknowledged this recognition, but was then victim to an unprovoked attack on one of its border posts. The entire incident has subsequently became known in Ecuador as the Tiwintza event (Figure 2). That such events are written differently according to nationalist and military rationales and agendas is not new, neither in Western or Latin American contexts. Moreover, such disputes have flared up along the Cordillera de1 Condor at regular intervals during the 50 years since the international boundary was apparently settled in 1942 under the Rio Protocol agreement. Following a major dispute in 1941, the United States, Brazil, Chile and Argentina had called the warring nations together in Rio de Janeiro to sign an agreement on the location of the new frontier (St.John, 1994). Since then, however, disputes have flared up periodically, most usually on the anniversary of the Rio Protocol signing on January 29th. For example, the Paquisha incident broke out in January 1981 under
the Ecuadorian
centre-left
government
of Roldos.
A.
SARAH
275
RAIXLIFFE
The mythical and material roles of the frontier in the Latin American process
have been addressed
ideological
extensively
(Hennessy,
development
1978), highlighting
charge invested in frontiers and borders throughout
the powerful
Latin American history.
My aim in this paper is neither to detail the history of border disputes between countries
(dating from independence
geopolitical
or international
elsewhere,
in the early 19th century)
relations dimensions
there is already a considerable
the
of such disputes (which are covered
notably in Day, 1982; Segarra Iguinez,
St.John, 1994). In political geography’s
the two
nor to examine
1992; Fundacidn
El Comercio,
1993;
long history of research on frontiers and borders
emphasis on the formal and definitional aspects of borders
in the abstract (e.g. Prescott, 1965, 1972), and on the geopolitical dimensions of countries’ relations mediated by borders, following Ratzel and Hartshorne. In this tradition, research on social practice
around frontiers focuses
discursive, representational governments
and populations.
in political geography (e.g.
Painter
of states, rather than the which shape behaviours
by
In this respect, my work aims to extend the recent work
on identities, citizenship and the everyday formation of affiliations
& Philo,
geographies
on the practices
and political cultural dimensions
1995),
through
and various geographies
negotiated,
not only in periods
geographies
I mean the descriptions
the examination
of how different
imaginative
of identities are drawn upon, re-articulated
of war, but on a day-to-day and discursive constructions
basis.
and
By imaginative
around place which are
made and re-made within a particular cultural setting. The Ecuador-Peru
dispute
raises issues about the meanings
of such frontiers
for
popular subjects in these two countries (although my focus here is on Ecuador), and the ways that they envisage frontiers in relation to the places and spaces in which they ‘ground’ their identity, and the complex ways in which subjects construct, negotiate and challenge
the affiliations to national territories. In such geographies
draw upon landscapes, of belonging
and affiliation (Radcliffe & Westwood,
Approaching
issues of the complex and statements
1996).
national subjects’ affiliations and expressions
and frontiers-resonating
of identities, subjects
maps and discourses about place as elements in their expressions
with issues of sovereignty, relationships
regarding national territory
difference and distance-also
between state-originating
discourses,
raises
representations
and citizens’ own feelings about these issues. The general literature on
such issues has been changed by the growing dissatisfaction with frameworks which posit an unthinking
tie to the nation and its territory. As awareness
of differences
between
official and popular images grew, so the Marxist notion of ‘false consciousness’ explanatory
power (Cohen,
of consensus
1994). The process of hegemony,
of issues through
cultural projects
lost its
relying upon the creation
and more nuanced
power relations,
draws upon more subtle notions of creating shared meanings and common discourse. Yet the relations of domination and resistance which characterize state-civil America, movements
especially (Escobar
under
authoritarian
military
regimes
and
and Alvarez, 1992), require further examination
of the process by which concerns,
with
relations in Latin diverse
social
of the exact nature
images, feelings and attitudes are produced and shared
across social space. The ‘power geometry’ (Massey, 1993) of civil-state
relations skews
the situation towards hegemony of state concerns and discourse, yet the active indigenous movements of the region (CONAIE, 1989) and the complex geographies through which identities are constituted, suggest that the creation of shared national imaginative geographies through which to create and reaffirm identity is not straightforward. From household relations Uelin, 1989) to public work programmes (Laurie, 1995), from the varied ‘repertoires’ of social movements (Eckstein, 1989) to the adoption cartographic practices by indigenous groups (Radcliffe, 1996). the sheer resistance
of of
276
Frontiers andpopular
complex,
and often incommensurate,
nationhood
socio-spatial
relations
to creating
shared geog-
raphies of identities remains to be analysed. The current article draws upon a research identities in contemporary people position themselves places) and economically this research relationships
gathered
project
to create ‘imagined communities’ information
on citizens’
of national
and problematize
socially, spatially (in imaginative geographies (Anderson,
views on borders,
how
and material
1991).’ Although the Amazon
to Peru, the focus was on the ‘banality’ of nationalism
nationalism (Billig, 1995). By ‘banal nationalism’, nationhood
on the geographies
Ecuador, which aimed to contextualize
and
rather than ‘hot’
Billig refers to the daily reproduction
of
through its ‘flagging’ in the media and mass culture’s use of terms such as ‘the
economy’
or in sports pages. Such quotidian reiterations of the nation, which appeals to
a ‘people’-in
either a chauvinistic or benign way-are,
the extraordinary
he argues, ‘banal rehearsals for
times of crisis [‘hot’ nationalism], when the state calls upon its citizenry
to make the ultimate sacrifice’ (op. tiff 11). The aim of the current article is then to examine
in the
affiliations
Ecuadorean
context,
the
to place, and their responses
relationship
between
citizens’
quotidian
during military conflict with Peru. While the
survey material was collected prior to the conflict, this is precisely the time when national identities are being reproduced,
reiterated and re-expressed.
At least since the 1970s most inhabitants
of Ecuador have known and acknowledged
their location within, and potential affiliation to, the nation-state. The discovery of oil and a succession
of developmentalist
rural schooling, populations
governments
during the 1970s led to the extension
of
and the increasing integration of previously isolated rural and indigenous
into national economy
and society, through migration, military service and
rising living standards. ‘At the end of the 11970~1, it would not be usual to meet Indians who would not have any idea of their nationality, or they would have a diffuse notion of their state ascription’ (Silva, 1991: 4, also Crain, 1990). Certainly by the mid-1990s groups of African-Ecuadorean,
indigenous
their nationality (Radcliffe and Westwood, issues of territory, sovereignty entire Ecuadorian
and mestizo
1996). These imaginaries
and nationalist
territory-nation
Section
I begins
impinge upon the representation articulate educational
are bound up with of the
with Peru is relevant.
In order to analyse these popular geographies borders.
diverse
all acknowledged
history in which the relationship
around frontiers, Amazonia and other
places, the paper first charts the state’s frontier projects, around
populations
by examining
and the popular geographies
the nation-building
of Amazonia and international
curricula, international ‘picture’ the nation
projects
which
frontiers. Such projects
relations, nationalist histories and mapping
practices,
all of which
relevance
of the recent Ecuador-Peru
and its frontiers
protecting
a border, but with a much broader
in particular
ways. The
border dispute lies not just in the question
of
discursive field and politics around the
Amazon basin, known as the ‘Oriente’, and its connotations as an area of promise, ‘development opportunities’ and national progress. The Oriente currently comprises 45.8 percent of the national land area, compared with one-fourth in the coastal plain and 25.2 percent in the highland Sierra.’ It is argued that the lines of a national border running through the Oriente are invested with multiple layers of meanings which reverberate through various arenas of state activity. Returning to the immediate past of the 1995 dispute, Section I ends with a discussion of the commemoration of indigenous soldiers, who served in the Tiwintza incident. In Section II, popular geographies of identity are examined in relation to three major themes. First, the context of popular national identities is traced quickly and the repicturing of the Oriente by subaltern groups is examined, drawing on surveys collected
277
SARAH A. RADCLIFFE
‘v’ F/
Ecuador ’ w
Frc;vm 2. ‘Open Borders’: Santiago river area.
Border
established
under
before the 1995 clash. The specific response Tiwintza
conflict
is discussed
1942 Rio Protocol
and expressions
with reference
and
disputed
Zamora
and
of non-state groups to the
to Shuar-Achuar
populations,
and with
regard to a statement issued by 16 women’s groups, before turning to the conclusions,
in
Section III.
I. Drawing the line: state, geographies
and the Amazon
Stute nation-building: picturing the nation For the state, issues of borders, sovereignty
and prospects
high on the agenda. In their nation-building
activities, which engage citizens at numerous
points in their lives, various state institutions elaborate regions’ role in national development,
for national development
and refine ideas of sovereignty,
and nationalist histories explaining
current territorial extent (Smith, 1986; Anderson, 1991). Geography,
national
as has the process
map (Anderson,
1991).
of the ‘logoization’
The Ecuadorean
the country’s
as a discipline and as
a series of practices, has often been important in this process (Hooson, and Smith, 1994),
are
1994; Godlewska
of the officially-sanctioned
state agenda
illustrates,
via these
practices, the significance of Amazonia and a discourse concerning Peru’s borders, as well as the various considerable ‘investments’ made by the nation-state in inculcating certain geographies
of identities in citizens. The creation
involves engagement
of citizens’ imaginative geographies
with a number of different institutions, discourses
and representa-
tions. State schools, geographical institutes, and the military literally draw maps of the national space, yet there are also implicit spatial representations and place-bound images which circulate in (the highly diverse) official discourses. In Ecuador, the school
278
Frontiers andpopular
nationhood
DiSpkd
_I._
Boundary
:
Gwdiiera
l Gualaquiza
DelCondor
Mountain Range
.*---.. ,
;
l =<
::. ,.;:... .g,:
+ A:..m
Ecuador
“:’
+T+\ ,: ,‘.
945
.,11:...-.-__r
:
: .I
FIGURE3. Tiwintza zone: Undelimited zone of Ecuador-Peru Cordillera de1 Condor, rivers and border settlements.
curriculum,
military
Ecuador’s landscapes, one particular theme
agendas
and the constitution,
produce emerges
international
as well as literary
frontier,
showing
and visual images
of
a polyphonic set of imaginative geographies. However, with regularity-the notion of a national space of an
Amazonian territory ‘truncated’ by an ‘invalid’ border. It is just such a geography which has been re-circulated and refined during the recent border dispute. A coalescence around these issues occurs in relation to the line set by the Rio Protocol agreement, signed on 29 January 1942 by Ecuador was charged with marking the new international
and Peru. A demarcation commission boundaries from 1 June 1942, and
A.
SARAH
successfully Western
mapped
the border
extension
was never
and Santiago
Rivers (Figure
to the existence
*watershed‘.
Given
distinct
declared
President
Josh Maria Velasco
example,
the
repeatedly
described
agreement,
of what
between
the definition
Preceding
Protocol
government entirely
(1972:
Ecuadorean notions
watershed.
over territory counted time, period
territorial
(Fundaci6n
transformation)
El Comercio,
forceful
ideological
officials
and their
damage
done to sovereign
In this context, pertinent,
charged. is inherently
of frontiers terms,
the views
as although
contemporary
relationship
independence
from
what are now Colombia, in 1830, Ecuador
As in other nation-states,
perceived
in contemporary
Ecuador’s
Amazon
which
1995. Cutting
since
identity
faith in internal
control what is
considerably
According
about
to Peruvian
‘amicable’
Historically,
was subsequently
‘usurped’
with
Colombia
are
disputes,
the
territorial
attitudes.
After its separation
as an alliance.
and
encroachment.
Colombia,
relationship
state
the injustice
their neighbour
part of Gran
(indeed in highly
to contemporary
to feel viscerally Peruvian,
over
the early Republican is encoded
have had historic
distinctly
across
national
and has changed
namely
and Ecuador.
a more
by the
state, and is
(Silva, 1991). However,
identity.
by Ecuadoreans
formed
lies along the ratified
and Silva, 1991). The contestation
and Ecuador
Ecuador
times
territory
ambiguous
by foreign,
Venezuela
retained
during
official Ecuadorian
are expected
is couched
Spain,
formally
for the Ecuadorean
and the media
upon which
with national
held
Colombia
It is thus an discrepancies
currently
has not been
weakening
1993; Quintero
territory
over
of military settlements
as Figure 3 indicates,
by Peru and Colombia
Ecuadoreans
to the which
Sur and 20 de Noviembre
by outside-‘illegitimate’-powers eliding
texts,
aspects),
according
satisfactorily.
In (for
for a new
19941) of border
a concentration
a frontier
by the military
encroachment
phases
security
dispute’,
as Cunhuime
is one of the origin myths of Ecuadorean-ness
as internal/external
given
placed
posts known
as grievously
is emotionally
1968-72).
and called
What remains
a ‘positional
Rio
and its demarcation.
unity and sovereignty
rests, the border
in the
nationalist
national
nor demarcated
the presumed
in 1960-1,
given as 78 km [St.John,
line which,
as an ‘open frontier’ of closure,
had been
populist-nationalistic
during
emphasized
mapped
That such
side is perceived
latterly
particularly
66) terms
the border
on both sides of the (provisional) Zamora-Cenepa
frontier
anticipated
in 1960, under
by the Peruvians.
of a boundary
between
of the Zamora
ran through
to that
President,
1972-9
100 km (sometimes
Prescott
which
as ‘inejuctuble’ or unoperational
the I995 clash, both countries
and installations
described
invalid
governments,
as it has not been
example
in the Oriente
in the zone
the international
conditions
Ibarra (five-times
rejected
is around
is still in dispute,
the
the Protocol
a position
Ecuadorians
particularly
river, the Cenepa,
geophysical
Ecuadorean
military
of the total. While the
demarcation
between the two rivers. However, by the 1960s air-photos a clear demonstration of a previously uncharted area,’ and
Ecuador decades,
contentious
of a further
the
border
3). In the Rio Protocol,
Protocol, subsequent
was unproblematic,
and remained
placed along the watershed from the US military gave pointed
for over 1600 km, some 95 percent
of the border
completed,
279
RADCLIFFE
Immediately which
after
comprised
from Gran Colombia the northern
Colombia
gained
country, a part of
by Peru; this territory
is not
treated in the current maps of the country like the Peruvian frontier. Another facet of the Colombian relationship is the fact it acts as a site for potential social unrest, compared with the relative groups,
such
peace
and security
in Ecuador.
The incursions
as El Ej&cite de Liberacidn National
(National
of Colombian Liberation
Army),
guerrilla and of
drug-traffickers threatens the SOCid peace of Ecuador, compared with the Peruvian threat to sovereignty. The ‘Other’ of Peru is thus further refined by reference to a distinct alterity represented by Colombia, a potential ally over the Rio Protocol, but a source of social
280
Frontiers and popular nationhood
unrest. Such differential discourses
(self-)representations
can be juxtaposed
about Peru as ‘robber nation’, a description
with the images and
which circulates not only inside
Peru but also outside it.* One key concern issues of sovereignty Amazonian
of Ecuadorean
official and popular nationhoods
is exemplified
by
over Amazonian territory. ‘Ecuador was, is and always will be, an
country’ is a slogan used from the 1960s
not only on government
headed
notepaper (Whitten, 1985), but also in other fields of state action, such as education. In the curriculum
for geography
and history, young secondary
pupils are taught about the
‘discovery’ in 1542 of the Amazon by Francisco de Orellana, one of Pizarro’s officers, on an expedition
starting in Quito. One representative
quote from a school text reads, ‘The
discovery of the Amazon River constitutes a transcendental Gonzalez,
fact for our nationhood’ (Garcia
1992). (By contrast, the Peruvians argue that the expedition
with only a brief provisioning
started from Lima,
stop in Quito.) The event is commemorated
variety of ways. The road to Guapulo commemorates
the expedition,
in Ecuador in a
which according to
history, took this route on its way to the Amazon. In each school year, and particularly in primary state and private schools, pupils record the date of the Amazon ‘discovery’ as part of their curricular activities. Moreover, in the large-circulation divergent editorial positions
Hay), commentary
pieces
(including
national press with widely
the daily newspapers
on the anniversary
El Comercio, El Universe,
are frequent
history in divergent
and notable.
So far, so
predictable:
the writing of nationalist
(Hobsbawm
and Ranger, 1987; Gillis, 1994). Yet here I wish to highlight the specific
geography, centred on Amazonia, upon which Ecuadorean
ways is not of course
new
versions of history rest. Within
this narrative, the foundation of cities along the river and Ecuador’s ‘originary’ claim to the riverine territory aim to demonstrate to schoolchildren into Amazonia, Orellana.
displacing
the extension of national patrimony
the name of Pizarro (associated
Claim to the Oriente
is bolstered
by reference
with Peru’s conquest)
with
to the Quito Audiencia-the
colonial administrative unit whose boundaries were, under the general law of utiposseditis, to provide the boundaries 1996). Contemporary
of the new states on independence
school textbooks
(Wright, 1941; Radcliffe,
place parallel emphasis on the historic situation, in
order to create a sense of current injustice vis-d-vis boundary settlements. notes, ‘it is the duty of the present and future generations
As one book
to demand our rights over the
Amazon and its riverside territories’ (Garcia Gonzalez, 1992). There are also tracings of national history to the pre-conquest creole nationalisms of the early nineteenth the Peru-centred Ecuadorean
Inca empire-a
century (Anderson,
period, preempting
history tying Ecuador ‘too closely’ to its neighbour-
popular histories refer to the Quito kingdom. The complexity
social structures are now well documented substantially
on the unreliable
the
1991). Rather than refer to
(Salomon,
historical chronicles
of precolonial
19861, yet contemporary
texts draw
by Padre Juan de Velasco (Brading,
19911, who recorded the genealogies and histories of a non-Inca ‘Kingdom’, in his sixteenth century invention of tradition. Contemporary school historians place considerable emphasis expansion
on the Quito kingdom
in (what later became)
and its ethnic
groups,
tracing marriages
and
the national space. Quito sovereign resistance to Inca
conquest is also prominent, ‘standing in’ (Bowman, 1994) for recent international conflicts by projecting onto the screen of the past a recent event. The general dynamics of nationalist remembering and forgetting (Anderson, 1991; Renan, 1990 118821) are rearticulated in this specific context, reminding pupils of the ‘Southern threat’: adults remember books from Velasco Ibarra’s term in which they were exhorted to ‘remember that Peru is your worst enemy’ (interviews with author, 1996). The selective remembering and forgetting which traces through nationalist texts recurs in Ecuador. As Renan put it in
SARAH
A. RAIXLIFFE
281
. .’ (Renan, 1990 W3821).
1882, ‘[florgetting is a crucial factor in the creation of a nation Although people may not remember extent
Colombians)
repeated
why the territory was lost to Peruvians (or to a lesser
they remember
that it was lost, or ‘stolen’ to use a phrase often
by ordinary citizens. Even during a period of calm between
1994, diverse groups of Ecuadorians
consistently
‘remembered’
the countries
in
the issue of territorial
‘loss’ and the ‘truncated’ nature of the national territory, even if they could not remember specific events (Survey results, 1994; cf. Boyarin, Interestingly, materialism.
1994).
the historical dynamic is one largely based on the dialectics of historical
School texts use a marxist conceptual
production
and the exploitation
marxisant
writing
specifically
by
orginates
the
of indigenous
framework,
populations
in the leftist domination
Movimiento
Popular
explaining
the modes of
by colonial overlords.
Such
of the Ministry of Education,
Democr&tico
(MPD,
Democratic
People’s
Movement) associated with Chinese marxist doctrine. However, the marxist interpretation is not universal;
exceptions
recent materials elaborated
are the work by the geographer for the bilingual education
The discipline of geography, national
identities
geography
in citizens.
Tergn, and the
as well as history, is central to the project of embodying To many Ecuadorians,
young and old, the teaching
of
and civic studies at school is associated with the teaching of ‘Ecuadorian-ness’ Forming for many years a compulsory
(ecuadotianz’dad).
the nation’s territorial history comprises identities.
The core elements
Ecuador,
Francisco
programme.
a knowledge
include
part of the school curriculum,
a key part of official inculcation
an assumed
of national
love for the land and territory of
of the history of frontiers
(Historia
de Limites), and different 1996.Ch. 3).
descriptive tropes for the three regions (Figure I) (Radcliffe and Westwood, Representations schoolroom
of frontiers and territorial issues are widespread,
walls.’
Maps show the Rio Protocol
as maps are found on
line marking
the new border
after
territory was ‘lost’ to Peru in the 1941 conflict, but the line is shown running through Ecuadorean
territory, as the border‘s legitimacy is not recognized.
Peruvian connotations been
labelled
Moreover, strongly anti-
are littered through the pedagogic material. In some texts, Peru has
the ‘Cain of the South’, a labelling
reaffirms the validity of Ecuadorean
of the Other which simultaneously
identity and territory. Peruvian press reports at the
time of the January 1995 dispute referred explicitly to these textbooks, to the ‘imaginary Ecuadorean
cartography-only
the Peruvians mention ‘[Ecuador’s] education
policy has its most obvious expression
and is based on, [its] official maps, where extensive of the Amazon River appear to be Ecuadorean’ pedagogic classes. sacrifice
materials on frontier change
Texts
quote
approvingly
for the nation, of honour,
Duties to the pattia
decorum
in,
Peruvian territories on the left bank
(Peru Embassy,
1995). Since 1079, the
have been taught in civics and social science
from Renan
on the solidarity
and the wish to maintain
Patriotism is defined for secondary defense
drawing attention
available in that country’. For example,
a community
established
through
life (da
corn&z).
school pupils as ‘sacrifice for the territorial integrity,
and national glories’ (Garcia
are listed as including
Gbnzalez,
1992: 212-213).
‘constant vigilance for the integrity of our
territory’ (ibid.). In teaching on the border issues (and the curriculum is the same in state, church or private schools), respect to Peru.
Ecuadoreanness
encompasses
Imagining national territories in constitutional institutionally
to the professional
mapping
a moral of superiority
and educational geographies
and cartographic
representation
with
refers interof national
space. Generally, twentieth century nations have found in geography a ‘necessary tool for clarifying and fostering their national identity’ (Hooson, 1994: 4; also Kent, 1995). In Latin America, the professionalization of geography, extensive links with the military and
Frontiers and popular nationhood
FIGURE4. ‘In their capable
hands’: The military as mestizo, professional and scientific. Mural in the Instituto Geografico Militar foyer (with grateful acknowledgement of assistance from the IGM Director and Geographical Division).
questions of territorial security have emerged in the present century particularly from the 1920s and 1930s
(Hepple,
1992).
Geopolitics
American armed forces, which have powerfully
have been combined
state, national security doctrines and the use of cartography,
a prime concern
of frontiers
natural wealth, mirroring and extending Anderson,
and give an inventory
inventories
of the
particularly in Argentina and
Brazil (ibid.; Child, 1985; Dodds, 1993). A national map, argued the Ecuadorean in 1922, would permit knowledge
of Latin
an organic metaphor
of population
1991). After the war of 1941, the Servicio Geogdfico
military
of the country’s
and patrimony
(cf.
Militar (Geographical
Military Service), part of the military high command and later re-named the Geographical Military Institute (IGM), was responsible frontier,
while
its civilian
employees
for placing concrete were
granted
markers along the new
military
designations,
thereby
assimilating them into the military command structure (Cortes, 1960). Since the 1940s the IGM has consolidated
a powerful position for itself, as the only sanctioned
maps and cartographic
information
in the country.” The IGM benefited
producer of
financially and
institutionally from the military government of the 197Os, which presented itself as an efficient administrator of the national economy. Such conceptions of the military remain in the popular imagination, can claim to be credible,
through which the armed forces, and the IGM in particular,
prestigious
and professional
(Figure 4).
Creating national maps was, and remains, a fundamental
role of the IGM, which prides
itself on this work, arguing that making maps links them with citizens (Author’s interview with IGM high command, Quito, April, 1994). Such a tutoring role begins with the IGM building itself in Quito, with two large mural maps (Radcliffe, 1996). Once again, the inclusion of the Rio Protocol line reminds the citizens of the never forgotten fact of the country’s ‘dismemberment’, as one official described it. The authority of the maps-withRio Protocol rests not only on the power of the military, but also on the judicial system,
A.
SARAH
under
which
carries
the same of maps without
a sentence
Ecuadorean
territory
inspections
from
of bookshops
However,
the Rio Protocol
to 16 years
of up
283
RADCLIFFE
in prison.
before
1941,
and other
outlets
line is considered
Maps
a law
under
which
law
traitorous
and
include
the
must
is enforced
through
regular
by the authorities.
it is not only the Rio Protocol
line which
represents
and calls up national
identities but also the configuration of the different regions comprising specifically the Oriente, or Amazon region. Amazonia represents,
Ecuador, most in its .fertility’,
abundance
and suitable
of resources
‘development’
and ‘emptiness’,
(interpreted
a space
in this context
market,
export-oriented
economy)
Trujillo,
1993). Ironically,
Peru too has looked
and settlement and hopes awaiting
outlets
were
into national
highlight
its distinctiveness
strategic
policy
sequences
and
segment
dialectic
as well interest
‘otherness’
national
new
extraction
as the engine
activities
national
export
creating
of whom
earnings,
when
of national
(Kimberling
and elites
income resonance,
with the neat civilized To summarize, As noted
expressed
nature
below,
certain
by contemporary
its spaces.
geographies cartographies
In such
appear
to
in nationalist
nation
(Bowman, a specific carried
is already
production
hands
19941, acting national
out over a period
Oriente
in the
for the majority reality through
of export
its oil
48.7 percent budget,
earnings
1993: 24). Despite widely
sprawling
of
In many respects,
of the national
is perceived
through
Amazonia
reverberate of these
when
of
a slight and 60.2
its economic by Quito
and
and wild-compared
can become
role
with multiple
various
arenas
are rearticulated
themselves
the
As Anderson
are invested
through
meanings
positioning
vis-d-vis the nation
of mapped
reminds
us,
‘map-as-logo.
of state and re-
for pure
and many
imagined countries,
sign,
no longer
1991: 175). In the era of print capitalism, easy education, the map-as-sign can ‘stand in’ for the
as a short-hand
space.
time. Indeed,
ambitions
comprised
70 percent
imaginaries,
central.
patrimony’
landscape.
elements
compass to the world’ (Anderson, reproducibility of images and mass around
development
which
subjects be
the
border
discursive
reasons
at a similar
the Oriente
with FCUNAE,
of Andean
and connotations,
civilian
security
‘national
is a land of promise.
and unaesthetic-ugly,
lines of a national
layers of meanings
reflecting
oil represented
however,
as uncivilized
its small
later
with Brazil’s Amazon
geopolitical
while in 1988, it was 40.3 percent
from the mid-1980s
the
parallels
expressed
In 1989, its petrol
percent Guayaquil
and
live elsewhere)
decline
significance
to conserve
conwithin
expansion.
of national
and exports.
and
for national
has strong being
toward
military
military
attention
eastwards
1970s
that Brazil may have
in its eastward
surface
(95 percent
the role of Oriente
been
and
into material
‘national
turned
region
of its Oriente
incorporated
explains,
1993;
attention
resource-rich
far-reaching
of Amazonia,
interests,
concern
factor
discursive
Ecuadoreans
and
have
has
culture
Patagonian
military’s
was a further
activity.
when
plans,
1985: 35). The
FCUNAE,
1990). Images
which,
for free-
for future growth
increasing
an untapped
As Whitten
the state ‘occupation’
and Argentina’s
with
territory
(Ram&,
and Silva, 1991: 226). Such an agenda
the Ecuadorean The
Oriente,
development
populations.
as to invigorate
(Quintero
1985; Kimberling
development
(Whitten,
endorsed
into the increasingly
to its Amazonian
[Quito-Guayaquil]
of Amazonia’
governments
region
and
national
for the region’s
[the] two-city
(Whitten,
on the Ecuadorean
incorporation
is both available
1993).From the 1970s oil discoveries,
(Orlove,
pinned
which
as incorporation
In Ecuador,
of around
for the speczjk the ‘logoization’
50 years. Whether
meanings
of national
in a textbook
circulating territory
has
or a mural, the
national territory marked with the Rio Protocol line has become an (unofficial) national symbol (as opposed to the constitutionally endorsed symbols of the flag, anthem and
284
Frontiers andpopular nationhood
shield). By contrast, the map calls upon shared imaginings of the nation and the truncated/mutilated nature of its space. Frontiers become highly significant places in this imaginative geography, to mark the limits of inclusion/exclusion remind citizens of the oppositional imagination around Peru.
Making heroes: the commemoration
of indigenous
The armed forces in Ecuador are predominantly with large numbers of indigenous in the
armed
command,
forces
vigorously
led by provincial mestizo professionals, recruits and staff. While racism
(Author’s
interviews
Quito, April, 19941, the patterns of advancement
reinforce differences
between
to
soldiers in the 1995 dispute
and African-Ecuadorian
is denied
and additionally
with military
high
and career structures tend to
racial groups as well as military grades (Pacari, quoted in
Ortiz et al., 1995: lS5>, although this distance is arguably less than in other Latin American countries,
such as Bolivia and Guatemala.
widespread
indigenous
the intensity
of the indigenous
unprecedented
the 1995 border dispute led to
effort
in protecting
the nation
of the dispute,
indigenous
soldiers
structures, while
which
armed confrontations.
The extent to which their involvement
represented
a novel departure
for the treatment
public culture.
Shuar ‘warriors’-a
social category
within that indigenous
group (see below&-were
profiled
reconnaissance
endorsed
area-including
Achuar and Quichua
populations-also
of certain ‘fallen heroes’ (Smith, 1986)--and
masculinities
1995)-is
of national commemorations, such a scale represented countries).
a vital component
Although
working-class
in
as exemplary
groups from the joined the armed
in particular certain
of the reordering and consolidation
the adoption of indigenous
a significant turn-around
and
groups
and reserves (Espinoza,
1995). While the celebration (Johnson,
with
and celebrated
and offered
forces in large numbers, entering the elite forces, the command
American
as
and in
was acknowledged of indigenous
citizens in the press, television and popular discourse. Other indigenous Amazonian
was seen
were made into heroes,
placed particularly on their roles in strategic planning,
celebrated national
Nevertheless,
into formal and informal defense
and worthy of great praise.
In the aftermath emphasis
mobilization
minority soldiers as heroes on
for Ecuador (and indeed other Latin
mestizo,
as opposed
to ‘white’/creole,
heroes are found in Latin America (such as Juan Santamaria in Costa Rica [Palmer, 1995]), the impossibility characterized
of imagining
indigenous
culturally-reconverted
symbolism
(Rowe and Schelling,
19911, the adoption
indigenous question
groups
as part of the nation
the region (e.g. Mallon, 1995). While African-Venezuelans
heroes
is striking,
of how indigenous
of the independence
I examine
hero Simon Bolivar
as black
in mass public national culture of explicitly
and probably
unprecedented.
This raises in turn the
groups in Ecuador now perceive the national community.
II. One nation at war? Popular geographies In this section,
has long
have created a
of war
the understandings
of war and border conflicts for popular
subjects in Ecuador some of which have been discussed by Ecuadorean
commentators
(Gallardo et al., 1995; Ortiz et al., 1995; Vargas Pazzos, n.d.1. Here, the general view of subjects regarding the issue of control over Oriente and the nation’s territorial history is examined, followed by a discussion of the specific situation of Shuar and Achuar indigenous groups, before turning to the issue of the gendering of nation and frontiers through an examination of women’s groups’ response to Tiwintza.
&UN
of these
Each
responses citizens
to border
arbitration
clashes
(which
Guayaquil
and
encouraged
with Peru have been
(op.&
31 January by (even
Beyond decentred
families
of mobilization
their national
activities
‘cultural
as diverse (Rowe
reconversion’
positionalities location,
appear
of crisis,
19941, there
in Ecuadorean
‘nation‘ and ‘community’.
there
are various
and
Westwood,
as television-viewing, and Schelling, Canclini,
music,
culture
and their degree of popular
broadcast
to larger audiences
hear
cultural
referred themselves Placing sense
In this respect,
it is the Peruvian
the proliferation
of media
zlis-d-vis the national community the Oriente
within
region’s
a wider
significance
explained,
occur.
‘the Amazon
national for
practices
subjective
can be illustrated
viewing.
In this region,
(which
tends
In this context.
1995). When
ordinary
Oriente
the national budget’; only slightly over-stating the perceive themselves to be living in a country defined
and
because
to
does
viewers
economy
Ecuadoreans
being
positioned
and affiliations.
Ecuadoreans
growth
Ecuador
unable
with the visual media
in their expectations picture,
and
and Venezuelan
and not the Ecuadorean channels,
to be
is owned
and local events.
(Billig,
on
with ideas of
and mestizo people
channels
engagement
for
depending
‘at odds’ with their viewing,
national
maintains
ceremonies
The
from Mexican
national
feeling
of ‘banal nationalism’
‘the’ economy,
of the
respondent
to regional,
programmes
their nationality.
to. Despite
Ecuadorean
and
culture
the possibilities
Indigenous
of programmes-apart
references Peruvian
in Ecuador.
than
which
culture
religious
in the Coast and Sierra). None of the channels
yet the content
the reproduction
about
is better
popular
of engagement
the issue of their television
raised
in and through
vary considerably,
spontaneously reception
of how
1993) or hybridization
The importance
television
not permit
brigades
sites of a
in which
in the Oriente
take for granted
food
In the multiple
popular
19911, activities
of participants
Peruvian
watch
(The
of voluntary
1996, Ch. 4). Popular
patterns
operas----makes
towns
is also a question
arenas
to television-viewing
Ecuadoreans
for once
border
of voluntary
including
with reference
soap
been
support
Up with Ecuador!‘ reports
situations.
can take place,
by such sites of popular
the social situation
run by the state,
Peru in
have
to have changed
and of the formation
in quotidian
(Radcliffe
(Garcia
offered
civilian
there were numerous
with the nation
of regions
and craft production
was only limited
demonstrations
in times
identities
(Rattansi,
side-by-side
appreciation
against may
would
was
Preempting
demonstrations
with the Rio Protocol!
to soldiers,
to Peru.
demonstrations’
Spanish
which
1995).
social sphere
a positioning
of popular of ‘Down
1995: 7). Moreover,
(Ortiz,
the issue
manage
reports
poor)
duties
In 1941, there
popular
of Ecuador’s
a process
favourable
‘violent
124). By 1995, the situation
the crowds
initiated,
in a ruling
1994: 123). However,
(St.John,
of changing
the responses
In the latet 19th century,
was
false) produced
Guardian, for lookout
variable.
dispute
eventually
in terms
century,
may have been
among
includes
border
to result
with newspaper
donations
however,
Quito
and chants
people
must be framed,
by the then government.
the war effort
285
~IXLIFFE
Since the nineteenth
Ecuador-Peru
by Ecuador
rumours
the
issues
conflicts.
of the
expected
again,
specific
to border
A.
at times have a good development.
it generates
As one
67 percent
of
situation. Generally, Ecuadoreans by its Amazonian terrain, reflected
in the 1994 survey. Asked if Ecuador was an Amazon country, 77 percent of largely indigenous and mestizo Andean communities affirmed it was. Asking u+!J~it was elicited varying responses, the majority with citizens’ knowledge gained Andean
respondents
Amazon.
Similarly,
claimed
utilized
connected with nationalist geography and history and during schooling. Overall, nearly half (49 percent) of all
the arguments
one middle-aged
that the country
found
Quichua-speaking
was Amazonian
‘because
in official
state discourses
man in a provincial President
Velasco
Ibarra
about
lowland
the town
said it was‘.
286
Frontiers
and popular nationhood
Shuar and Achuar experiences of nation and war
Despite the widespread reiteration of state-led nationalist discourses, the imaginative geographies of residents in the Oriente region often differ from the official ‘commonsense’ about the region. Since the 19th century rubber boom, Amazonian indigenous groups (ethnically distinct to highland and coastal groups) were forced to be mobile, migrating to rubber-producing areas or fleeing recruitment. Nowadays, the Quichua group is one of the largest indigenous groups in the Ecuadorean Amazon, totalling some 60000 (Hudelson, 1987; CONAIE 1989). Rather than seeing the Oriente as a wild proliferation of out-of-control tropical nature, men and women in Napo province had a different aesthetics around place, according to the survey. Self-identifying indigenous groups in Napo province persistently referred to the town of Coca or the entire Oriente as the most beautiful part of the country, compared with other ethnic groups (here and elsewhere), who said it was the least beautiful national landscape. Such positive views of the region suggested a closer affiliation to that place than among mestizos and white-creoles, who affiliated themselves in aesthetic judgements with more ‘civilized’ Andean and urban areas, such as the capital Quito. The role of the Shuar-Achuar populations in the 1995 incident has been touched on above, with respect to the public cultures of nationalism arising out of the dispute. However, this needs careful contextualization in light of the long-term relationships between state and indigenous groups, and in light of the particular experiences of ShuarAchuar groups in previous disputes, These factors differentiated their experiences from their co-nationals’. Numbering some 42400, Shuar-Achuar are located largely in the southern Oriente provinces, hence their lands and settlements are close to the undelimited zone where the Tiwintza events occurred. Moreover, the recruitment of Shuar-Achuar men into the Ecuadorean armed forces has occurred at the same time as their federations have demanded land-titles from the state. Such factors involve a multifaceted engagement with nationhood and national community among these populations. The agenda of indigenous organizations, specifically the Federation de Centros ShuarAchuar (Federation of Shuar Achuar Centres, FCSA), has been to call for decentralized decision-making and acknowledgement of cultural difference. The Federation’s main objective is to defend Shuar territory, couched in a discourse of citizens’ rights to landtitling and security. These conditions have not so far been met under republican missionary schemes or agrarian reform. Initially, the Federation fought for individual land titles but soon moved onto communal landclaims, via the legal process (which engaged them in a variety of hybridizations and cultural transformations). Another priority for the Federation is education, whereby cultural values and integral involvement in national society are brought together in tension. Nevertheless, the policy of using radio-schools, adopted in 1972, has been successful, being endorsed by the state and then extended via the Bilingual Education Programme in the 1980s. The imaginative geographies and ‘national’ identities of Shuar-Achuar groups are quite distinct to ‘official’ geographies, as well as being differentiated from popular geographies elsewhere in Ecuador. Since the early colonial period, settlements and gold extraction using Indian labour forced the interaction between Shuar-Achuar and colonizer and later, republican citizens. After various indigenous uprisings through the 18th and 19th centuries, there was a major republican drive to integrate these populations through the creation of the Catholic mission of Mendez and Gualaquiza. While the Salesian mission
SARAH
was
to ‘civilize’
the
indigenous,
their
A.
287
RADCLIFFE
period
is now
viewed
by the Shuar-Achuar
as
negative. [Missionaries] taught us to respect authorities which were not Shuar, that we were part of a different nation, so we could not visit our brothers who remained on Peruvian territory (CONAIE, 1989: 89) The
setting
separation small-scale
up
of a national
border
between
Ecuador
of Shuar families on either side. Although skirmishes and acknowledge themselves
for warfare
was transformed,
as noted
and
Peru
resulted
groups had previously to be warrior societies,
in the
engaged in the context
in an FCSA account:
During and before the arrival of the Spanish and other foreigners, we were involved in inter-ethnic or tribal wars. One day, as in 1941, there was a war between two peoples (pueblos) who we had never known before, they were Ecuador and Peru. Later they divided our lands without taking us into account and obliged us to call our families Peruvians, and ourselves Ecuadoreans. They put up border markers and they called it [aI boundary and established military settlements (Federaci6n de Centros Shuar-Achuar, 1992) It is ironic, and perhaps identity
around,
nationalist
geographies.
demands their
surprising,
to find an indigenous
war and conflict
as the grounds
Yet indigenous
narratives,
for land and decentralization,
alter/native
through
which
recruitment
the
nation-state
community.
by the state as traitorous, quote
and
a memory
a specific
operates
politics
However,
of inclusion
Amazon
in ethnic indigenous
the sovereignty
based
on
inherent
in
and exclusion
in Latin America resulting
of, and
to the official
fully with the contradictions
armies,
threatening
utilizing
a challenge
The mechanisms
men into national
of national
the following
engage
in nationhood.
modernist
of indigenous
a discourse perceived
position
group
for offering
resulted
in the
killings framed demands
by
were
and unity of the state, as
illustrates.
Such Was the history of the wars between Ecuador and Peru, we were forced to kill ourselves and they declared victories and each time there are conflicts, the first victims are us, the Shuar-Achuar, and our sons [in their capacity as soldiers] are obliged to build trenches against their other brothers Shuar, Achuar, Awajun, Wampis on the Peruvian side. They call our Federation leaders subversives, enemies of the nation Ipatrid, who threaten the integrity of the state by proposing a parallel state (op.cit) The Tiwintza only through dispute.
During
considerable
incident
engaged
recruitment the
incidences
displacement
were demanded,
the Shuar-Achuar
into the national
mostly
populations
of January,
and insecurity. by the Armed
1995, the Shuar-Achuar Evacuations from the immediate
Forces,
who predicted
possibility
of bombing
raids by the Peruvians.
Among
proposed
evacuations
caused
given
daily care. In this context,
much
children
in very specific
ways, not
army but also in the wider civilian effects
concern, and women
of the
experienced frontier area
in rather alarmist
terms the
the Shuar living on the border, the reliance
were moved
of their cattle herds
away from the zones,
the on
while
men remained to care for livestock.’ While Shuar combatants were commemorated, FCSA political demands for land and rights have not been forgotten in post-bellum Ecuador, as the following quote from an Amazonian leader explains. The quote echoes the state’s historical
claims
to the region,
[The boundary markers ofl Tiwintsa, Base Sur, Cueva de 10s Tayos, Coangos, Condor Mirador, Ortiz, Monge, Etsa have been, are and will be indigenous territories of Ecuador. (Pandam, 1995: 131)
288
Frontiers and popular nationhood
Just as the state historically
has claimed
rights over the Amazon
indigenous
federations
using
unprecedented
international
conflict to articulate their claims to land.
Women and frontiers:
are
brotherhood’ community.
1990)
which
as full citizens
is the masculinist
Yet despite such ambivalent
exclusions,
the setting of limits to nation, through experiencing relations of exclusion/inclusion writers note, women biologically
region,
now the
recognition
position in the modern project of nationhood
1993, not being imagined
(Pratt,
public
in
an
the gender politics of the border dispute
Women have an ambivalent
1991;McClintock,
their
interpretation
of the imagined
women have played a vital role in and, in some cases, reinforcing,
upon which nationalisms
may be involved
reproduce
(Kandiyoti,
within the ‘republican
so frequently
in the nation through
the nation, they physiologically
the
rest. As several
five key arenas:
‘mark’ the boundaries
they
between
national groups, they transmit the cultural values labelled ‘national’, they may be signifiers of national difference, and finally, they can participate in national/liberation struggles (layawardena,
1988; Yuval-Davis and Anthias, 1989). In many cases, the embodiment
heroism in war and conflict is masculinized,
while ‘womenandchildren’
of
(Enloe, 1989) are
the objects of male protection. However, in the Peru-Ecuador and infantilized
groups
border dispute no such easy overlap between gendered
could be drawn.
In January
1995, Ecuadorian
and Peruvian
women re-drew the borders around a different and gendered space, thereby articulating an alternative geography
of identity through which to express ideas about the incident.
Soon after the emergence
of conflict on the border in early 1995, sixteen women’s rights
groups8 in Peru and Ecuador issued a statement demanding an immediate ceasefire and for dialogue between
the governments.
One key section of the statement reads:
Our peoples [ptreblosl-united by history and culture--suffer hunger and injustice and must not fall into the trap of war. We will not feed the arms industry, we will stop those who encourage violence and we will not fall into the dirty game of fratricidal wars. (La Epoca [Santiago, Chile], 28 January, 1995: 4) Positioning themselves
‘outside’ the national space, the women’s groups claimed a higher
authority for their actions than patriotism. The quote illustrates the possible grounds on which to reject the war-the rejection context.
of economies
common history and culture of the countries involved; the
oriented
to war -yet
In part, such a re-positioning
it places the reasons within a gendered
rested upon a notion of a wider ‘Latin American’
identity; part of the statement referred to the women ‘being guided by love [amod for this tormented Latin America’. Couching such emotional attachment in regional-continental terms recast nationalism as not the sole primary subjective attachment. (Latin Americanwide affiliations are not only expressed by women; in the 1994survey, men and women throughout Ecuador referred to Latin America as a potential or actual space with which to identify, often in opposition to narrow patriotism or to United States hegemony.) Moreover, the text of the statement recirculated and re-situated the domestic spaces and socialities with which Latin American women have been so closely associated, and which are historically linked with ‘republican motherhood’, thereby making them ‘precariously other to the nation’ (Pratt, 1990). In their statement, the Ecuadorean and Peruvian women described themselves as ‘citizens, mothers, wives and daughters’. In one way, this expression of identity draws upon wider social discourses in which women are
A.
SARAH
acknowledged
as (special)
development
agents
contribute While
citizens,
to the ‘modern’
the women’s
groups’,
nation
oppositional
it does indicate national throughout
Latin America,
Laurie,
offers
level,
which
in
and
a further standard
In many
of politics, of
new
and violation central
political ways
most
identity
which
continues
a
rights
In a less overtly in the elaboration
which
in turn have
struggles
then,
a
identities,
of human
the
(lelin,
women’s
of it operating
community,
ways.
women’s
through
statement
to deal with poverty,
1992).
notions
national
and Central America.
and
Alvarez,
and
of identities,
The anti-war
relations,
articulation
women
not represent
of gendered
and Peru have been
and strategies
feminist
persuasions-did
geographies
in Argentina
in Ecuador
of gender
1995; Escobar
statement
political
to military governments
forms of organization
led to the renegotiation
by diverse
and experienced.
particularly
community
(and racial, class and located)
signed
in the gendered
groups
in reproduction,
(Luna, 1993: 14): ‘modern’
or recontextualization
opposition
way, women’s
of grassroots
was
are apprehended
of women’s
work
gendered
and with differing
long history political
in these
imagination
a repositioning
identies
their
crisis managers
statement-which
rural and urban,
complete
through
and as domestic
289
RAIKLIFFE
1989: group
at the grassroots
and
place
are
being
moved
onto
a stage
renegotiated.
III. Ceasefire? The
Some concluding
dispute
over
negotiations, wounded
alone
of some
and disappeared
widely
of national
perceived
identity’
1995 dispute
the
nation,
in addition
are not fixed, infinitely
costs for Ecuador 19951), the dispute
of belonging,
suggested
that
as the
ethnic-racial
and
ways
nations,
regions,
frontiers
to their senses
success,
location
they imaginatively
pattias
chicas and towns. of belonging
event
nation
region
and complex as some gave position
and ‘trajectories
the
of allegiance’
here
in light of the
to places
suggests
approaches
impression within
and might
educational,
of the diverse, a geography
the persistence
of affiliation’
within
that geographies
with diverse
themselves
Nevertheless,
circles
postmodern
a vivid
through
and so on) with modern
affiliations
Ecuadoreans
in Ecuador.
emerges
examined which
to
looks set to have long
of ‘concentric
material,
an end
The ‘recuperation
and affiliation
(to village,
identifications,
backgrounds
in which
people.
identity
notion
are they,
demonstrating
defeated
national
survey
multifaceted
but neither
in 500
immediate
as a national
to national
an estimated
[Gallardo,
senses
such
Despite
and direct
in play and flux. Interviewing
complex
a dialogue.
of a ‘vanquished’,
1986). By contrast,
of
of Peace of Itamaraty’
to official figures
local affiliation
with Peru, found
the nation,
suggest. class,
with
and Smith,
of identity
been
of a pre-modern,
identification
beyond
it has
towards
et al., 1995: 131) in the Tiwintza
(Ortiz
for everyday
past,
replacement
in Ecuador
frontier
of the Declaration
on both sides, (according
as a discourse
term implications In the
and moves
US$25O million
what was perceived
international
by both parties
led to a ceasefire
dead,
(Williams
Ecuador-Peru
with the signing
Brasilia, which
has been
the
comments
of Oriente
(Desmond,
of and
1993) was
striking. While the geographies to international conflict, which border disputes geographies
through
For Ecuadoreans access, territorial tion
of Amazonian
of identities outlined here do not contribute directly and simply they do arguably frame and contextualize the situation within can occur, by reiterating on a daily basis the imaginative
which
interviewed sovereignty resources,
people
apprehend
and understand
their place
in the world.
before the 1995 border dispute, the issues of Amazonian and prospects for material development through exploitawere
crucial
ways
through
which
they
thought
about
Frontiers andpopular nationhood
290
themselves as Ecuadorean. If the nation is an imagined community, then Ecuadorean national identities are very fundamentally organized around a sense of shared grievances and around the imaginative geographies of the dual issue of borders, and Amazonian ‘promise’. When the two issues come together, as in the 1995 clash, the mobilizing potential around such an event reminds subjects of the never-forgotten issue and spaces around these themes. Nevertheless, Ecuadorean citizens are not mindless dupes, with a ‘false consciousness’ of nationhood somehow imposed by the state. Indigenous groups resident in the Amazon retain and elaborate their own politicized and selective imaginative geographies in which the parameters of ‘development’, ‘promise’ and resource use may be different but still articulate certain notions of community, landscape and progress. In this sense then, Ecuadoreans experience cross-cutting geographies of identity in which the nation (and its specific configuration) is only one space onto which senses of belonging are mapped. Such diverse positionings, imaginative geographies and aesthetics raise the issue of subjects’ cross-cutting affiliations to place and to various communities simultaneously. The nation in this context represents a place, a geography and an imagined community among others, not replacing other belongings. Popular nationhood and conceptions of frontiers lie at the interface in collective subjects between official discourses of place and belonging in the nation, and ‘ordinary’ senses, practices, and discourses about affiliation to place and people; these geographies of identities hence provide positionalities. In theoretical terms, such a relationship between community, place and identity implies that previous discussions of national identity have not sufficiently taken on board the multiple geographies in and through which subjects articulate and imagine their communities and places, including the national space. The juxtaposition of local, regional and national affiliations concurrently allows subjects to position themselves in certain ways, thereby qualifying or conditioning a state-generated national identity. These cross-cutting (yet mutually constituting) geographies of identities, emerging with great clarity in the 1995 border dispute, suggest that they provide positionalities from which to interpret and critique official geographies of international frontiers.
Acknowledgements In writing
this
bibliographic
paper,
and Peru about IBG, and the nation:
indebted
invaluable
the topic.
Society
Sallie Westwood, gratefully
I am
help were
to
Pilar
A preliminary
version
for Latin American
Studies,
on which
is based,
a social
this paper
geography
acknowledged.
Larreamendy,
in its preparation.
was presented where
detailed
helpful
(No.
reports
comments.
by an ESRC project
in Ecuador’
and suggestions
comments
useful
and
from Chile
1996 conferences of the RGS-
at the
I received
was funded
of nationalisms
Comments
whose
Nina Laurie provided
R0002343211,
from three anonymous
Research
entitled funding
reviewers
with
‘Re-Making which clarified
is my
argument.
Notes 1, The project involved based
in seven
interviews
(50 women,
lower-middle village;
a questionnaire
locations, and
largely
Guayaquil; Additionally,
50 men)
middle-class
Afro-Ecuadorean
elite
survey
of varying
Guayquil;
semi-structured
were Quito; area
mixed
1994 and 700 Ecuadorean origin
carried
out in each
area,
Andean
indigenous
and
of Esmeraldas,
AmZOn
interviews
during
racial-ethnic
were
class
women
background.
including: mestizo
and the urban
populations carried
and
in urban
black and
One
and men, hundred
upper-class provincial poor rural
out in 1994 with diverse
Quito; town
and
communities Napo
of
province.
government
and
SAIWH
2. 3. 4. i. 6. 7. 8.
A.
291
RADCLIFFE
organization officials (indigenous confederations, women’s movements, education groups. church groups, military etc.). Newspapers, official and organizational literatures were collected and analysed. When the dispute arose in 1995, further material from newspapers and publications were gathered from Embassies of both countries in London and from Ecuador, Chile and Peru, while additional information was collected in Ecuador during July 1996. The remainder is accounted for by the Galapagos Iskinds. I am grateful to a reviewer for pointing out that, along with other countries, Ecuador subsequently signed a treaty protesting surveillance by superpowers. On the relationship with Colombia, I am grateful to Pilar Larreamendy for explaining this, while on Peru as a robber nation I am grateful to Nina Laurie for pointing this out. On maps in other institutional settings, particularly the military, see Radcliffe (1996). See Radcliffe (1096) for an example of popular ‘seizure’ of mapping from the state. I am grateful to Pilar Larreamendy for clarifying this. The groups included Foro de la Mujer Ecuatoriana, Red de Mujeres de Azuay, Movimiento de Mujeres de Guayaquil, Mujeres por la Democracia, Centro de Investigaciones Ciudad, Cepam, Ceimme, Repem y Ceplaes, from Ecuador, and from Peru, Fundaci6n Maria Elena MOpnO, Movimiento Ramos, Foro Mujer, Grupo Promotor Mujer, Movimiento Democr%ico Popular de Mujeres, and Centro de la Mujer Peruana Flora Tristan.
9. The distinction groups
between
is increasingly
America’s
women’s
middle-class, problematic,
largely yet
feminist,
it is worth
groups
stressing
and the
lower-income
multi-class
‘women’s’
nature
of Latin
movement.
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