Estado narrador: puntos de sutura e intersticios en las representaciones de la agricultura familiar y la economía popular en políticas públicas de Argentina

We analyze two national laws as significant practices that propose identifications, “stitches” (Hall, 2003), regarding the representations of the State itself and the recipients of each public policy. We inquire the identities narrated in Historical Reparation of Family Farming for the Construction...

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Autor principal: Ordóñez, María de los Ángeles
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: ANarchivo [Facultad de Ciencias de la Comunicación] 2023
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Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/CIPeCo/article/view/43967
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Sumario:We analyze two national laws as significant practices that propose identifications, “stitches” (Hall, 2003), regarding the representations of the State itself and the recipients of each public policy. We inquire the identities narrated in Historical Reparation of Family Farming for the Construction of a New Rurality law (n.° 27.118/14) and of Public Emergency law (n.° 27.345/16), and we place them within social regimes of accumulation of which they form part. The State as a narrator is positioned hierarchically in the structurally unequal dispute for the imposition of principles of representation of the social reality and the actors that make it up. However, subaltern subjects find interstices in relation to the identifications that seek to define them, and move without ceasing to generate their own narratives.