Hi!
Good afternoon, today I will write about the studies I would like
to follow after getting my undergraduate degree in archeology, which
I hope to conclude next year.
I have asked myself a lot about continuing with my studies, because it means investing a lot of time and energy in that, what generates me enough doubts.
Last year I had the opportunity to meet the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) in Ciudad de México, a place where with good grades, you can follow graduate studies for free. The truth is that I get very excited about the idea of being able to live for a long time (2 or 3 years) in another country. In addition, in Chile the postgraduate courses in archeology are few and with theoretical perspectives that do not attract my attention.
In this sense I would like to study, abroad, a part-time course in person that allows me to work at the same time and focus my studies on topics related to community archeology in a feminist perspective.
I think it is important to be able to broaden our knowledge of the archaeological discipline, highlighting the Latin American aspects that are often invisible. In Chile in particular, little attention has been given to theoretical production, thus leaving archaeological production in an informational and interpretive defisit, reproducing almost entirely colonial aspects. For this I would like to train in a different academic perspective.
I have asked myself a lot about continuing with my studies, because it means investing a lot of time and energy in that, what generates me enough doubts.
Last year I had the opportunity to meet the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) in Ciudad de México, a place where with good grades, you can follow graduate studies for free. The truth is that I get very excited about the idea of being able to live for a long time (2 or 3 years) in another country. In addition, in Chile the postgraduate courses in archeology are few and with theoretical perspectives that do not attract my attention.
In this sense I would like to study, abroad, a part-time course in person that allows me to work at the same time and focus my studies on topics related to community archeology in a feminist perspective.
I think it is important to be able to broaden our knowledge of the archaeological discipline, highlighting the Latin American aspects that are often invisible. In Chile in particular, little attention has been given to theoretical production, thus leaving archaeological production in an informational and interpretive defisit, reproducing almost entirely colonial aspects. For this I would like to train in a different academic perspective.
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