If there is one thing about tradition, it is that it sparks fertile debate about its dialogue with the present. For some, this conversation is inescapable, while others see the past as an anchor that does not allow new generations to propel themselves into the future. For
Vicente Prieto Gaggero, tradition is a political tool, a strategy that allows him to reflect on the control that exists in our societies; a biopolitical exercise that is not far from the colonial processes that, since the 16th century, have taken away the ancestral territories of Latin American peoples.