El Manifiesto de la Matriarca Indígena: Parentesco, matriarcado y sanación indígena

El Manifiesto de la Matriarca Indígena: Parentesco, matriarcado y sanación indígena

Renee Tsinigine Holt

Volume 26, Number 1 (2026) 26 (1): 47-61


Palabras clave matriarcado indígena, trauma histórico, metodologías indígenas, feminismo decolonial, sistemas de parentesco, sanación intergeneracional

Resumen

Este artículo examina el matriarcado indígena como un marco fundamental para la sanación, en el que la recuperación, la resiliencia y la continuidad cultural frente al trauma se sostienen a través del parentesco. Mediante una metodología indígena que integra teoría y narrativa, la autora sitúa la experiencia vivida dentro de la investigación sobre trauma histórico, feminismo indígena, matriarcado y enfoques decoloniales, basada en los sistemas de conocimiento navajo (diné) y nez percé (nimiipuu). Criada por padres afectados por las políticas de asimilación de las escuelas residenciales, la autora contextualiza la sanación personal dentro de las disrupciones coloniales más amplias de las estructuras matriarcales indígenas, la transmisión del conocimiento cultural de las mujeres y los sistemas relacionales de cuidado y parentesco.

Autores/as

Renee Tsinigine Holt

Publicado junio 5, 2026

Cómo citar

El Manifiesto de la Matriarca Indígena: Parentesco, matriarcado y sanación indígena. (2026). Fourth World Journal, 26(1), 47-61. https://doi.org/10.63428/xvbb2734

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Creative Commons License

Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 4.0.

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