Abstract
From a physical perspective, the Andes has been a challenge
for the people living there, who have filled it with memories. In other words, it’s a space
that contains footprints of older cultures and practical knowledge of the present, resulting
in a long process in construction, resistance and adaptation to the unending colonialist
experience.
It is evident today that in the septentrional Andes, community and family experience in the
management of contiguous bio-regions is prevalent. It has facilitated the access to diverse
food products that
constitute the base of their diets, a societal and symbolic network that gives them a sense
of belonging. Through the eight stories built on the lives of commoners from the towns of
Saraguro, Cañari and the
mestizos inhabitants of Cuenca located to the south
Ecuadorian sierra, strategies will be shown on how the management of space is used. It’s
relationship to the food production by a generation born during the first half of the
twentieth century, the changes that have affected the descendants throughout that century
and all coinciding with a time of a political state and societal modernization
| Original language | Spanish |
|---|---|
| Journal | Ateneo |
| State | Published - 2018 |
Keywords
- Economía campesina; Agrobiodiversidad; Pueblos indígenas; Alimentación
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