Martha Luz Machado Caicedo
Defeating Invisibility: A Challenge For Afro-descendant Women In Colombia

January 20, 2013

As women and Afro-descendant, the women from the Black Communities’ Process in Colombia (Proceso de Comunidades Negras en Colombia–PCN), join the call to see violence against women as a human rights problem that has a multi-dimensional character. In this sense, the abuse of the human rights of Afro-descendant women not only affects them as women but also as Afro-descendants living in a homogenizing context of geo-economic wars that exacerbate the historic practices of domination through violence, and reinforce their impoverishment and marginalization through the dispossession caused by forced displacement. Read the report>

       

         AFRICAN DIASPORA
         SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
 
         CULTURAL  PROJECTS     
         CONSULTANCY AND ADVICE 



Martha Luz Machado Caicedo wins important Colombian science prize

December 16, 2011

Martha Luz Machado Caicedo, who obtained her doctorate at the University of Amsterdam, won in 2011 the Premio Alejandro Ángel Escobar prize, the most important award for science in Colombia. She received this award for her work in the field of social studies and humanism. Machado Caicedo obtained her doctorate in March 2011 for her study of the cultural influence descendants of African slaves transported to Colombia had on the indigenous Chocó population.


                                                                             foto Reindert Groot

In her thesis, Machado Caicedo states that the Chocó were culturally influenced because for centuries, they shared the same territory with the African slaves and their descendants. She supports her theory using historical sources and myths as well as comparative research. Prominently featured in her thesis are the carvings of religious staffs used by the Chocó. According to Machado Caicedo, these staffs exhibit African features.

Jury report
The jury found Machado Caicedo’s research to be ground-breaking because no previous in-depth research had ever been carried out in this subject. Her work enhances the cultural knowledge of the Afro-Colombian population. In the past, the unique cultural history of this group was not recognised in Colombia. In publishing her thesis on the aesthetic memory of the Chocó and the descendants of African Slaves, Machado Caicedo attempts to rewrite their history (and thus the history of Colombia) and contribute to the discourse on exclusion and oppression.

Website Fundación Alejandro Ángel Escobar>

Interview with Martha Luz Machado Caicedo>
Post-scriptum, Unradio, 24 October 2011

Read this book for free> 

Review by Gabriel Restrepo>
e-revist@s, 31-01-2012