Abstract
In this paper, I explore the political potentialities the women’s collective in the Mam Maya town of Toj Coman Guatemala open when they bring the historical moment of the Spanish invasion into their present work. I ask, which moments in space and time do women in Toj Coman collectively curate to envision a different future for their community? Drawing on collective members’ conversations about textile arts, their construction of a public water tank, and the Spanish invasion, I argue that how these histories are collected and shared unsettles dominant narratives and creates different openings, potentialities, and futures. I draw on insights from 4 months of arts-based collaborative research with the collective between 2018 and 2019 and theorizations of desire, colonial patriarchy, cuerpo-territorio, and refusal by Indigenous and decolonial scholars. I use the word ‘curation’ to signal the creative and selective ways that women draw on their experience and expertise to carefully both show and deny specific representations, knowledges, and memories across contexts.
Acknowledgements
I am so grateful to the women in Toj Coman who have shared their knowledge, time, and experiences with me. Thank you to my colleagues and friends who have read versions of this paper and provided their generous insight.
Disclosure statement
No conflict of interest has been identified by the author.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Lara Lookabaugh
Lara Lookabaugh is a PhD Candidate in Geography at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.