Two hearts and a champurria tongue: The poetic creation of Adriana Pinda as communicative morphogenesis of the mapuche kimün

Main Article Content

Abstract

The mapuche-huilliche poet Adriana Paredes Pinda calls herself “champurria” as a way to distance herself from the linguistic and cultural purity of both the hegemonic tongue and formal mapudungun. This position, plus the knowledge of the poet as a bearer of the mapuche kimün as a machi, suggest the possibility of understanding her texts as communicative morphogenesis, taking heed of the notion of “mestizaje” proposed by Gloria Anzaldúa, María Lugones and Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui. The reading of the machi-poet demands of us a deeper knowledge of the mapuche kimün to understand the worlds created in her morphogenetic trance, as she dislocates both Spanish and Mapudungun on a measureless, unpredictable, intercultural, multiple textual unity.

Article Details

Section

Articles

Author Biographies

, University of Concepción

Universidad de Concepción

, University of Concepción

Universidad de Concepción

How to Cite

Two hearts and a champurria tongue: The poetic creation of Adriana Pinda as communicative morphogenesis of the mapuche kimün. (2022). ALPHA. Revista De Artes, Letras Y Filosofía, 55, 101-115. https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-22012022000551095

References