Toggle menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Comrade:Charhapiti/sandbox

More languages

Index:

To-do

Dogma

Comrade:Charhapiti/sandbox/Essays

Turtle Island Study Group / Grupo Leer Isla de Tortuga

We address genocide caused by imperialism in all its forms. We promote solidarity between the global south and indigenous people of Turtle Island by mobilizing for migrant rights, studying indigenous Marxist theory, and working towards national liberation and national development. Family separation, settler colonialism, MMIP, trauma-informed, healing, dialectical materialist spirituality, language and cultural reindigenization, anti-BQ. Indigenous people exist globally


Turtle Island Multinational Characteristics

Gender

Matrilineal inheritance: P'urhepecha, Lakota,

Patrilineal inheritance:

Political-social status of women and men:

Sexual division of labor: Lakota: "The women were all busy cutting the meat into strips and hanging it on the racks to dry." ...Men hunt[Black Elk Speaks] P'urhepecha: women cook and take care of the house, men hunt

Attitudes towards women and men:

  • "Among us there in the brush and out in the Hunkpapa camp a cry went up: “Take courage! Don’t be a woman! The helpless are out of breath!” I think this was when Gall⁶ stopped the Hunkpapas, who had been running away, and turned them back."....('Prove yourselves to be men!')..."They hurt and made sores, but if we knocked them off or cried Owh!, we would be called women." (Black Elk Speaks)
  • Tariacuri quote: "Are these not the words of women?" ... (&: Those men who do not prove themselves as men in masculine pursuits are teased as being like women.)

Attitudes towards manly women:

Attitudes towards womenly men:

Attitudes towards two-spirit people:

Attitudes towards homosexuality:

Relationship to the Land

  • Referring to aspects of the universe as "grandfathers" or "grandmothers". (P'urhepecha, Oglala Lakota)

Modes of Production

Original communism

Travelers vs. Villagers

  • P'urhepecha = Mostly villagers with some "chichemeca" travelers
  • Lakota: late 1800s travelers