Indigenous Mestizos: The Politics of Race and Culture in Cuzco, Peru, 1919-1991. (Reviews).Indigenous Mestizos: The Politics of Race and Culture in Cuzco, Peru, 1919-1991. By Marisol de la Cadena (Durham & London: Duke University Press, 2000. xiii plus 408 pp. $64.95/cloth $21.95 paperback). The problem of race mixture and how it is perceived is one of the recurrent and most interesting problems in Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. . New perspectives, especially the postmodem twist, have provided tremendous potential to find new insights in an old and worn topic. Marisol de la Cadena's book is an important but dense contribution to the field that takes the challenge of understanding racial categories with new social science analytical tools. Although de la Cadena is an anthropologist, her book is mostly a historical treatise on how views on race and Indians changed over the past century. Cuzco was the capital of the Inca empire “Inca” redirects here. For other uses, see Inca (disambiguation). The Inca Empire (or Inka Empire) was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America. The administrative, political and military center of the empire was located in Cuzco. and has been one of the most important cities within post-independence Peru. Cuzco is also located in the most heavily Indian portion of the country; the local elites have had to justify their place within the national hierarchy in competition with other regional elites while taking into account an indigenous heritage that people of coastal Peru despised de·spise tr.v. de·spised, de·spis·ing, de·spis·es 1. To regard with contempt or scorn: despised all cowards and flatterers. 2. . The author shows how the concepts of race evolved in the everchanging definitions of white and Indian within the regional context. She presents a highly complex argument and each page is chock full of ideas and new insights. Although rewarding, sometimes this writing style and the sheer density of ideas make reading this book hard going. The Cuzco elites felt themselves to be white, despite the fact that people from the coastal capital, Lima, saw them as dark-skinned. In an effort to define their own equality vis-a-vis the Lima elites and their superiority to the surrounding mestizos and Indians, the Cuzco elites exalted their Inca past in the 1920s. They thought of the Indians as rural brutes who had forgotten the glories of the Inca past. Only Cuzco elites knew the Inca speech; Indians from the countryside, according the elites, spoke a degenerate version of the language. In a period when radicals on the coast were denouncing the landlordism Land´lord`ism n. 1. The state of being a landlord; the characteristics of a landlord; specifically, in Great Britain, the relation of landlords to tenants, especially as regards leased agricultural lands. of the highlands, Cuzco elites asserted that they were blameless blame·less adj. Free of blame or guilt; innocent. blame less·ly adv.blame ; the abuses came from newcomers (gamonales) who administered the lands (and the Indian peons on them) in immoral ways. In one of the most important sections of the book, de la Cadena disputes that the Indian rebellions of the 1920s, upon which a number of Peruvianist scholars made their reputations, took place. Instead, she asserts that landlords used the reports of rebellions as political weapons to assert their control over nativist na·tiv·ism n. 1. A sociopolitical policy, especially in the United States in the 19th century, favoring the interests of established inhabitants over those of immigrants. 2. organizations that attempted to wrest wrest tr.v. wrest·ed, wrest·ing, wrests 1. To obtain by or as if by pulling with violent twisting movements: wrested the book out of his hands; wrested the islands from the settlers. control from the landlords. The Cuzco elites asserted that they were not at fault for the unrest, since it was the bad gamonales who incited the Indians to revolt. Elites in fact liked high Inca culture and began to stage plays depicting the Incas first for internal consumption, but by the 1940s for tourists as well. This brought about a struggle for authenticity with lower-class interlopers INTERLOPERS. Persons who interrupt the trade of a company of merchants, by pursuing the same business with them in the same place, without lawful authority. , during which time the elites attempted to maintain their control over the cultural production of the city and of the region. Numerous conflicts between official intellectuals and self-identified intellectuals marked the century. De la Cadena also adds much to our knowledge of indigenism, a movement that began in the 1920s, presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. to protect the Indian population from rapacious outsiders. De la Cadena reveals the profoundly racist assumptions behind the efforts at the "redemption" of the natives and shows how the movement was in truth an ethnocidal project (that posited the elimination of peasant culture) as well as part of an elite project of maintaining control over rural folk. It also devalued de·val·ue also de·val·u·ate v. de·val·ued also de·valu·at·ed, de·val·u·ing also de·val·u·at·ing, de·val·ues also de·val·u·ates v.tr. 1. To lessen or cancel the value of. the position of mestizos as the representation of the worst of both European and Indian features. The "neo-Indianists," while they fought with the older indigenistas over how to represent and control the natives, did little better. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the author, nobody came out well in this debate, including such towering figures in Peruvian intellectual history as Luis Valcarcel, Jose Carlos Mariategui, and Jose Maria Arguedas. The last part of the book is based on the participant observation participant observation, n a method of qualitative research in which the researcher understands the contex-tual meanings of an event or events through participating and observing as a subject in the research. of the author herself. Through an analysis of fiestas, cargo systems and the like, de la Cadena unpacks the exceedingly complex views of ethnicity that depend on urban location, length of time in the city of Cuzco, occupation, gender, and a whole host of other factors. Rather than create models, the author shows how the concepts of ethnicity varied over time, thus creating a processual framework rather than a static model. Her main finding is that among mestizo mestizo (māstē`sō) [Span.,=mixture], person of mixed race; particularly, in Mexico and Central and South America, a person of European (Spanish or Portuguese) and indigenous descent. people within the city, there is a new sense of indigenous pride that is different from that of the peasant. People follow and constantly modify certain indigenous customs, thus creating a sense of being neto, which loosely translates as being "authentic." These are the "indigenous mestizos" that de la Cadena refers to in the title; these individuals created their own racial hierarchy within the city, placing themselves in an intermediate position between the recently arrived country bum pkin and the members of the high Cuzco elite. This is a stimulating work that on each page presents new ideas "New Ideas" is the debut single by Scottish New Wave/Indie Rock act The Dykeenies. It was first released as a Double A-side with "Will It Happen Tonight?" on July 17, 2006. The band also recorded a video for the track. and insights. It is a book that is most easily absorbed in small portions, but certainly worth the effort. It is too bad that the author, after spending most of the first portion on the Cuzco elites, drops them from her analysis in the last part. Does this mean that they ceased to exist? Did they take refuge in the newer regional think tanks such as the Centro Bartolome de las Casas Las Ca·sas , Bartolomé de Known as "Apostle of the Indies." 1474-1566. Spanish missionary and historian who sought to abolish the oppression and enslavement of the native peoples in the Americas. ? How did the entrance (or perhaps better said invasion) of numerous foreign and Lima anthropologists and historians change the sense of ethnicity among the consumers of such outsiders' academic works? This book represents a new wave of studies on ethnicity in Latin America. It addresses many important issues and provides a new perspective on twentieth-century Peruvian history. I am sure that it will be a standard work in the field and particularly for the Andes for quite some time. |
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