This page was last updated October 15, 2007     
 
  Home
The Press


Subject Categories

Archaeology
Art History
Biography
Economics / Banking /
Management / Investment

Education
Geography / Environment
History
Jewish Studies
Latin American Studies
Library Studies
Literary Criticism & Linguistics
Middle East Studies
Musicology
Philosophy
Politics & IR
Psychology
Psychotherapy
Social Anthropology
Social Studies
Theatre & Drama
Theology & Religion
Women’s Studies
  All Titles
Alpha Press
Libraries of Study
 

Asian Studies
Contemporary Spanish Studies
Critical Inventions
Demographic Developments
First Nations & Colonial Encounter
Latin American Studies
Peace Politics in the Middle East
Religious Beliefs & Practices
Spanish History
Spirituality in Education

   
 
  You are in: Home > Latin American Studies > Power, Culture, and Violence in the Andes  
 

Power, Culture, and Violence in the Andes

Christine Hunefeldt and Milos Kokotovic

Christine Hunefeldt is Professor of History and Director of the Center for Iberian and Latin American Studies at UC, San Diego. Her publications include, Comunidades indigenas entre Colonia y Republica (1992); Paying the Price of Freedom (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994); and A Brief History of Peru (rev. edn., 2004).

Milos Kokotovic
is Associate Professor of Latin American Literature and Director of the Latin American Studies Program at UC, San Diego. His publications about the Andes include The Colonial Divide in Peruvian Narrative (SAP, 2005, 2007).

 

Scholars from Anthropology, History, and Literary and Cultural Studies present their current research on culture and violence in the Andean region. Within an interdisciplinary approach, the contributors to this volume explore the complex and mutually constitutive relationship of culture and violence in Peru and Bolivia, countries with large indigenous populations who have largely preserved their culture and way of life in spite of centuries of colonial domination and the encroachment of capitalist modernization, including its latest free-market variant.

The intertwined histories of culture and violence in the Andes are examined through analyses of the indigenous and popular mobilization that brought Evo Morales to power as Bolivia’s first indigenous president, conservative Latin American intellectuals’ response to this popular rejection of neoliberal economic and social policies, the work of Peru’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the legacy of the Shining Path war, and nineteenth-century intellectual and political discourses on race, gender, and the incorporation of indigenous peoples into the nation-state.

 

 
List of Contents to follow

 

Publication Details

 
ISBN:
978 1 84519 247 8 h/b
 
 
Page Extent / Format:
272 pp. / 229 x 152 mm
 
Release Date:
May 2008
  Illustrated:   No
 
Hardback Price:
£55.00 / $69.50
 
 

 

 

© 2007 Sussex Academic Press   |   Disclaimer