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Cuadernos de Geografía: Revista Colombiana de Geografía

Print version ISSN 0121-215XOn-line version ISSN 2256-5442

Abstract

BASTISTA DA COSTA, Everaldo  and  MONCADA MAYA, Jose Omar. Original Decoloniality in Latin America and Baroque Conditioning of the Territory of New Spain: Convents, Presidios and Indigenous Towns. Cuad. Geogr. Rev. Colomb. Geogr. [online]. 2021, vol.30, n.1, pp.3-24.  Epub Feb 25, 2021. ISSN 0121-215X.  https://doi.org/10.15446/rcdg.v30n1.80924.

Baroque in Latin America calls on concepts and notions related to various disciplinary fields, and geographically, it can be reviewed as an aesthetic synthesis of the political historicity of space. This study analyzes those geographical objects that explain what is defined as baroque conditioning of the territory, resultant of Iberian colonization in the Americas, especially New Spain. Methodologically, it is about (1) the complex conditioning of the territory of New Spain forged by three amalgamated colonial institutions of possession and control (mapped in this study): convents, presidios, and indigenous towns, and (2) the introduction of the notion of original decoloniality. Research reveals how those objects (amalgamated) constitute embryos of cities conditioned by a funding mentality and a "baroque ethos", paradoxically stimulants of an indigenous, black, and mestizo resistance on the continent. Such modern (or baroque) conditioning of territory -reflexing its total possession real and imaginary, through juridical, theological, and productive colonial praxis- becomes the period of sacralization of New Spain space (centuries XVI-XVII).

Highlights: research article that analyzes and criticizes the colonial/modern conditioning of the New Spanish territory, through the strategic distribution of convents, presidios, and Indian towns (centuries XVI-XVIII) founded on the baroque ethos, that resulted in an original decoloniality as an expression of indigenous, black and mestizo resistance in Latin America.

Keywords : baroque conditioning of the territory; convents; original decoloniality; Latin America; New Spain; presidio; indigenous towns.

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