Shepherds at the End of the Millennium

Inequality in the Argentine Countryside

by | Aug 3, 1999

Shepherds at the End of the Millennium” is an examination of marginal and forgotten Argentines. Argentina is marked by a distorted development that favors the great urban centers- especially Buenos Aires- and restricts growth in the country.

Changes in the world economy have resulted in even more inequality in the countryside. There is a lack of funding for programs to enable the development of an integrated nation. Until fundamental political changes occur, we can continue to say that an isolated community that has not grown yet will not grow. The isolated communities of Argentina are victims of this fate.

The highlands of Pampa de Achala are in the province of Córdoba. There, a traditional community is moored. It exists in utter isolation. There are no roads, no electricity, no telephones. This community survives on a simple economy based on herding goats and sheep.

The residents live scattered in the mountain, attached to that place where they were born and have buried their dead. In spite of the distance they have a strong sense of community which is reflected in celebrations such as Easter or the day of the patron saint. Until recently, and in spite of the scarcity of means they have lived in social harmony with the environment facing their only predator: the puma.

My background, formation and experience, linked closely with the world of aesthetics, with nature and the social problems, drew me to this place. I was captivated by fascination and awe. At first there was a certain magic about the weather and landscape, the fog taking over the land and reducing the vast space to a setting filled with isolated objects and ghostly characters. I was moved by those people living in that inaccessible wilderness, so isolated, so concerned in their relationship with nature: such stubbornness and effort to remain there. These same people transforming the landscape, gutted animals or recently dead, hanging like fruits from the trees. Then, I discovered a ‘non-urban’ relationship with nature and death, sometimes almost scrawny and brutal.

My photographic work is born of this estrangement before a landscape which presents itself as ambiguous; magic and beautiful and at the same time harsh and rigorous; of my unease before people living in so demanding a landscape, whose lives are so entrenched in the exigencies of nature.

Fall 1999

 

Cristina Fraire, an Argentine photographer, began her career as a photojournalist. Entranced and compelled by the life in Pampa de Achala, she now devotes her energies to photographing the community with grants from the the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation and Argentinas Fondo Nacional de las Artes (National Fund for the Arts). Her most recent exhibition was at a group showing of ten Argentine photographers at the Institute of Contemporary Photograply in New York. Her photographs are included in the collection of the Bibliotheque Nationale de France, in the Museum of Fine Arts of Houston, USA, and in the books La FotoGalería, and Fotografía Argentina Actual Dos, both published by the photographic publisher La Azotea, and other publications. She can be reached at «cristina fraire@ciudad.com.ar>.

Related Articles

Zamorano and its Neighbors

Zamorano and its Neighbors

We walked along together, 12-year-old Lizet and I, down the narrow, ragged paths that connected the various houses of El Chaguite to one another. “Let’s call in from here,” Lizet said…

The Central America Project

The Central America Project

After decades of armed conflict and political instability, Central America is entering a period of peace and democracy that opens promising perspectives of economic and social progress…

The Birth of INCAE (1963-1965)

The Birth of INCAE (1963-1965)

Since the birth of INCAE was closely tied to the beginning of my career at Harvard Business School, the reader will perhaps forgive the autobiographical tone of these reflections. And right…

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Subscribe
to the
Newsletter