ABSTRACT

The notions that appear in the title of this article have had, for a long time, a problematic relationship. This is so, in part, because the ideas about indigeneity that have circulated in the West owe much to the different ways in which archaeology and anthropology have dealt with the notions of time and temporality in relation to indigenous peoples. In this chapter, I explore some of the multiple aspects of this troublesome relationship, focusing on the conceptualizations of time and indigeneity that archaeology has produced and disseminated.