The people of Quirpini, a rural community in the Bolivian Andes,
are in constant motion. They visit each other's houses, work in
their fields, go to nearby towns for school, market, or official
transactions, and travel to Buenos Aires for wage labor. In this
rich ethnography, Stuart Alexander Rockefeller describes how these
places become intertwined via circuits constituted by the movement
of people, goods, and information. Drawing on the work of Henri
LeFebvre, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Nancy Munn, Rockefeller argues
that by their travels, Quirpinis play a role in shaping the places
they move through. This compelling study makes important
contributions to contemporary debates about spatiality,
temporality, power, and culture.
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