This Book Offers The First Interpretive Synthesis Of The History Of Andean Peasants And The Challenges Of Nation-Making In The Four Republics Of Colombia Ecuador Peru And Bolivia During The Turbulent Nineteenth Century. Nowhere In Latin America Were Postcolonial Transitions More Vexed Or Violent Than In The Andes Where Communal Indigenous Roots Grew Deep And Where The ''Indian Problem'' Seemed So Daunting To Liberalizing States. Brooke Larson Paints Vivid Portraits Of Creole Ruling lites And Native Peasantries Engaged In Ongoing Political And Moral Battles Over The Rightful Place Of The Indian Majorities In These Emerging Nation-States. In This Story Indigenous People Emerge As Crucial Protagonists Through Their Prosaic Struggles For Land Community And ''Ethnic'' Identity As Well As In The Upheaval Of War Rebellion And Repression In Rural Society. This Book Raises Broader Issues About The Interplay Of Liberalism Racism And Ethnicity In The Formation Of Exclusionary ''Republics Without Citizens''.
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