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In La Frontera, Thomas Miller Klubock offers a pioneering social
and environmental history of southern Chile, exploring the origins
of today's forestry "miracle" in Chile. Although Chile's forestry
boom is often attributed to the free-market policies of the
Pinochet dictatorship, La Frontera shows that forestry development
began in the early twentieth century when Chilean governments
turned to forestry science and plantations of the North American
Monterey pine to establish their governance of the frontier's
natural and social worlds. Klubock demonstrates that modern
conservationist policies and scientific forestry drove the
enclosure of frontier commons occupied by indigenous and
non-indigenous peasants who were defined as a threat to both native
forests and tree plantations. La Frontera narrates the century-long
struggles among peasants, Mapuche indigenous communities, large
landowners, and the state over access to forest commons in the
frontier territory. It traces the shifting social meanings of
environmentalism by showing how, during the 1990s, rural laborers
and Mapuches, once vilified by conservationists and foresters, drew
on the language of modern environmentalism to critique the social
dislocations produced by Chile's much vaunted neoliberal economic
model, linking a more just social order to the biodiversity of
native forests.
The first major history of Chile's most significant peasant
rebellion and the violent repression that followed In 1934,
peasants turned to revolution to overturn Chile's oligarchic
political order and the profound social inequalities in the Chilean
countryside. The brutal military counterinsurgency that followed
was one of the worst acts of state terror in Chile until the
military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet (1973-1990). Using
untapped archival sources, award-winning scholar Thomas Miller
Klubock exposes Chile's long history of political violence and
authoritarianism and chronicles peasants' movements to build a more
just and freer society. Klubock further explores how an amnesty law
that erased both the rebellion and the military atrocities lay the
foundation for the political stability that characterized Chile's
multi-party democracy. This historical amnesia or olvido, Klubock
argues, was a precondition of national reconciliation and
democratic rule, which endured until 1973, when conflict in the
countryside ended once again with violent repression during the
Pinochet dictatorship.
The Chile Reader makes available a rich variety of documents
spanning more than five hundred years of Chilean history. Most of
the selections are by Chileans; many have never before appeared in
English. The history of Chile is rendered from diverse
perspectives, including those of Mapuche Indians and Spanish
colonists, peasants and aristocrats, feminists and military
strongmen, entrepreneurs and workers, and priests and poets. Among
the many selections are interviews, travel diaries, letters,
diplomatic cables, cartoons, photographs, and song lyrics.Texts and
images, each introduced by the editors, provide insights into the
ways that Chile's unique geography has shaped its national
identity, the country's unusually violent colonial history, and the
stable but autocratic republic that emerged after independence from
Spain. They shed light on Chile's role in the world economy, the
social impact of economic modernization, and the enduring problems
of deep inequality. The Reader also covers Chile's bold experiments
with reform and revolution, its subsequent descent into one of
Latin America's most ruthless Cold War dictatorships, and its
much-admired transition to democracy and a market economy in the
years since dictatorship.
In La Frontera, Thomas Miller Klubock offers a pioneering social
and environmental history of southern Chile, exploring the origins
of today's forestry "miracle" in Chile. Although Chile's forestry
boom is often attributed to the free-market policies of the
Pinochet dictatorship, La Frontera shows that forestry development
began in the early twentieth century when Chilean governments
turned to forestry science and plantations of the North American
Monterey pine to establish their governance of the frontier's
natural and social worlds. Klubock demonstrates that modern
conservationist policies and scientific forestry drove the
enclosure of frontier commons occupied by indigenous and
non-indigenous peasants who were defined as a threat to both native
forests and tree plantations. La Frontera narrates the century-long
struggles among peasants, Mapuche indigenous communities, large
landowners, and the state over access to forest commons in the
frontier territory. It traces the shifting social meanings of
environmentalism by showing how, during the 1990s, rural laborers
and Mapuches, once vilified by conservationists and foresters, drew
on the language of modern environmentalism to critique the social
dislocations produced by Chile's much vaunted neoliberal economic
model, linking a more just social order to the biodiversity of
native forests.
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