TY - JOUR KW - Bolivarian Revolution KW - Indigeneity KW - Mapoyo KW - Revolución bolivariana KW - UNESCO intangible heritage KW - UNESCO patrimonio inmaterial KW - indigenidad KW - mapoyo KW - nacionalismo KW - Nationalism AU - Gabriel Alfonzo AU - Ana Mendez AB - This article analyzes the political dynamics involved in the inclusion of the Mapoyo oral tradition into UNESCO s lists of Intangible Cultural Heritage. We frame this designation as an “event” that encapsulates a contested process of negotiation between the Mapoyo Indigenous community and the Venezuelan state. Our article evaluates the intersection of two asymmetrical (but nonantagonistic) political agendas in terms of how they are enacted through heritage-making practices: (1) the Mapoyo s demands for territorial autonomy and (2) the Bolivarian Revolution s nationalist program. We focus on the way this heritagization process was tied to discourses of patriotic indigeneity centered on a sword attributed to Simón Bolívar. We argue that even though heritage-making practices mostly reproduce nation states’ hegemonic discourses, they can also open spaces for subaltern groups to exert relational forms of agency. Ultimately, we show the implications of the Mapoyo heritage designation in reimagining the place of Indigenous peoples in Venezuela s national history. BT - Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology DA - dec DO - 10.1111/jlca.12563 LA - English M1 - 3-4 N1 - Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Inc N2 - This article analyzes the political dynamics involved in the inclusion of the Mapoyo oral tradition into UNESCO s lists of Intangible Cultural Heritage. We frame this designation as an “event” that encapsulates a contested process of negotiation between the Mapoyo Indigenous community and the Venezuelan state. Our article evaluates the intersection of two asymmetrical (but nonantagonistic) political agendas in terms of how they are enacted through heritage-making practices: (1) the Mapoyo s demands for territorial autonomy and (2) the Bolivarian Revolution s nationalist program. We focus on the way this heritagization process was tied to discourses of patriotic indigeneity centered on a sword attributed to Simón Bolívar. We argue that even though heritage-making practices mostly reproduce nation states’ hegemonic discourses, they can also open spaces for subaltern groups to exert relational forms of agency. Ultimately, we show the implications of the Mapoyo heritage designation in reimagining the place of Indigenous peoples in Venezuela s national history. PY - 2021 SP - 386 EP - 407 T2 - Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology TI - Bolivar s Sword: The Mapoyo and the Politics of Heritage-Making in Venezuela UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85120869598&doi=10.1111%2fjlca.12563&partnerID=40&md5=995b5214a7820b404802304fafea6f66 VL - 26 SN - 19354932 (ISSN) ER -