Daily Life of Aymara Women in El Alto

The Video Archive of the Centro de Promoción de la Mujer Gregoria Apaza (CPMGA)

Authors

  • Juan Alvarez-Durán single

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/bsj.2025.387

Keywords:

Aymara migrant women, audiovisual archive, popular communication, Popular Reporters, digitization, gender violence, neoliberalism, feminism, historical memory

Abstract

This article documents the Audiovisual Archive of the Centro de Promoción de la Mujer Gregoria Apaza (CPMGA) in El Alto, Bolivia, which preserves 1,074 cassettes (UMATIC, BETAMAX, VHS, VIDEO 8) with records of the daily life and struggles of migrant Aymara women in the early years of the city of El Alto. Projects such as Warmin Arupa and Nayrasaja, produced by Reporteras Populares and the internal Video Unit, stand out, addressing issues such as gender violence, women’s economy and rights. The text details the process of cataloging and digitizing the archive, emphasizing its historical value for collective memory. It also contextualizes the role of the CPMGA in the democratization of media and resistance to the neoliberal model, linking its work with feminist movements and popular communication.

Published

2025-12-11