<div>Ninety percent of the indigenous population in the Americas lives in the Andean and Mesoamerican nations of Bolivia Ecuador Mexico Peru and Guatemala. Recently indigenous social movements in these countries have intensified debate about racism and drawn attention to the connections between present-day discrimination and centuries of colonialism and violence. In <i>Histories of Race and Racism</i> anthropologists historians and sociologists consider the experiences and representations of Andean and Mesoamerican indigenous peoples from the early colonial era to the present. Many of the essays focus on Bolivia where the election of the country's first indigenous president Evo Morales sparked fierce disputes over political power ethnic rights and visions of the nation. The contributors compare the interplay of race and racism with class gender nationality and regionalism in Bolivia Ecuador Guatemala Mexico and Peru. In the process they engage issues including labor education census taking cultural appropriation and performance mestizaje social mobilization and antiracist legislation. Their essays shed new light on the present by describing how race and racism have mattered in particular Andean and Mesoamerican societies at specific moments in time.<p>Contributors<br>Rossana Barragán<br>Kathryn Burns<br>Andrés Calla<br>Pamela Calla<br>Rudi Colloredo-Mansfeld<br>María Elena García<br>Laura Gotkowitz<br>Charles R. Hale<br>Brooke Larson<br>Claudio Lomnitz<br>José Antonio Lucero<br>Florencia E. Mallon<br>Khantuta Muruchi<br>Deborah Poole<br>Seemin Qayum<br>Arturo Taracena Arriola<br>Sinclair Thomson<br>Esteban Ticona Alejo</p></div>
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