The Latin American Subaltern Studies Reader

Forside
Ileana Rodríguez
Duke University Press, 24. sep. 2001 - 459 sider
Sharing a postrevolutionary sympathy with the struggles of the poor, the contributors to this first comprehensive collection of writing on subalternity in Latin America work to actively link politics, culture, and literature. Emerging from a decade of work and debates generated by a collective known as the Latin American Studies Group, the volume privileges the category of the subaltern over that of class, as contributors focus on the possibilities of investigating history from below.
In addition to an overview by Ranajit Guha, essay topics include nineteenth-century hygiene in Latin American countries, Rigoberta Menchú after the Nobel, commentaries on Haitian and Argentinian issues, the relationship between gender and race in Bolivia, and ungovernability and tragedy in Peru. Providing a radical critique of elite culture and of liberal, bourgeois, and modern epistemologies and projects, the essays included here prove that Latin American Subaltern Studies is much more than the mere translation of subaltern studies from South Asia to Latin America.

Contributors. Marcelo Bergman, John Beverley, Robert Carr, Sara Castro-Klarén, Michael Clark, Beatriz González Stephan, Ranajit Guha, María Milagros López , Walter Mignolo, Alberto Moreiras, Abdul-Karim Mustapha, José Rabasa, Ileana Rodríguez, Josefina Saldaña-Portillo, Javier Sanjinés, C. Patricia Seed, Doris Sommer, Marcia Stephenson, Mónica Szurmuk, Gareth Williams, Marc Zimmerman

 

Innhold

From Representation to Recognition
1
Projects for Our Time and Their Convergence
35
Subalternity Modernity Hegemony
47
Solidarity as Event Communism as Personal Practice and Disencounters in the Politics of Desire
64
Negative Globality and Critical Regionalism
81
From Militant Narrative to Postmodern Politics
111
Aboriginal Communities Contemporary Resource Rights
129
The Toledo Circle and Guaman Poma
143
Twenty Preliminary Propositions for a Critical History of International Statecraft in Haiti
241
Ungovernability and the Birth of Tragedy in Peru
260
Visualizing Society in Bolivia
288
The Teaching Machine for the Wild Citizen
313
Apprenticeship as Citizenship and Governability
341
The Architectural Relationship between Gender Race and the Bolivian State
367
The New Social Movements in Argentina
383
Whos the Indian in Aztlan? ReWriting Mestizaje Indianism and Chicanismo from the Lacandon
402

A Rhetoric of Particularism
175
Beyond Representation? The Impossibility of the Local Notes on Subaltern Studies in Light of a Rebellion in Tepoztlan Morelos
191
Subalternity and Us
211
African American Subalternity and the Ungovernability of the Democratic Impulse under SuperCapitalist Orders
227
Coloniality of Power and Subalternity
424
Contributors
445
Index
449
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Om forfatteren (2001)

Ileana Rodríguez is Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at Ohio State University. She is the author of Women, Guerrillas, and Love: Understanding War in Central America and House/Garden/Nation: Space, Gender, and Ethnicity in Postcolonial Latin American Literatures by Women, also published by Duke University Press.

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