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Acting Inca - National Belonging in Early Twentieth-Century Bolivia (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,322
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Acting Inca - National Belonging in Early Twentieth-Century Bolivia (Paperback)
Series: Pitt Latin American Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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For most of the postcolonial era, the Aymara Indians of highland
Bolivia were a group without representation in national politics.
Believing that their cause would finally be recognized, the Aymara
fought alongside the victorious liberals during the Civil War of
1899. Despite Aymara loyalty, liberals quickly moved to marginalize
them after the war. In her groundbreaking study, E. Gabrielle
Kuenzli revisits the events of the civil war and its aftermath to
dispel popular myths about the Aymara and reveal their forgotten
role in the nation-building project of modern Bolivia. Kuenzli
examines documents from the famous postwar Pe\u00f1as Trial to
recover Aymara testimony during what essentially became a witch
hunt. She reveals that the Aymara served as both dutiful plaintiffs
allied with liberals and unwitting defendants charged with wartime
atrocities and instigating a race war. To further combat their
\u201cIndian problem,\u201d Creole liberals developed a public
discourse that positioned the Inca as the only Indians worthy of
national inclusion. This was justified by the Incas' high
civilization and reputation as noble conquerors, along with their
current non-threatening nature. The \u201cwhitening\u201d of Incans
was a thinly veiled attempt to block the Aymara from politics,
while also consolidating the power of the Liberal Party. Kuenzli
posits that despite their repression, the Aymara did not stagnate
as an idle, apolitical body after the civil war. She demonstrates
how the Aymara appropriated the liberal's Indian discourse by
creating theatrical productions that glorified Incan elements of
the Aymara past. In this way, the Aymara were able to carve an
acceptable space as \u201cprogressive Indians\u201d in society.
Kuenzli provides an extensive case study of an \u201cInca
play\u201d created in the Aymara town of Caracollo, which proved
highly popular and helped to unify the Aymara. As her study shows,
the Amyara engaged liberal Creoles in a variety of ways at the
start of the twentieth century, shaping national discourse and
identity in a tradition of activism that continues to this day.
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