From Peasant Struggles to Indian Resistance: The Ecuadorian Andes in the Late Twentieth Century

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Overview

Drawing on extensive research in her native Ecuador, Amalia Pallares examines the South American Indian movement in the Ecuadorian Andes and explains its shift from class politics to racial politics in the late twentieth century. Pallares uses an interdisciplinary approach to explore the reasons why indigenous Ecuadorians have bypassed their shared class status with other peasant groups and movements in favor of a political identity based on their unique ethnicity as Indians.

In the 1960s and 1970s, land reform and the modernization of economic and political structures in Ecuador led to changes in the sense of self and community held by South American Indian activists. Pallares recounts how a campesinista (peasant-based) identification developed into an indianista (Indian-based) form of personal and communal self-definition. Ethnic identity was no longer conceived as a subset of class identity--a change that shifted the Indians’ ideological focus from local struggles to pan-ethnic resistance.

In the process, indigenous peoples created a positive Indian self-definition and a pan-ethnic Indian movement. They also reconceived their political identity, their cultural structures, and the relationship between their social movement and the state. Through this new sense of themselves, they sought to confront racism and obtain political autonomy.

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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780806134598
  • Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
  • Publication date: 12/28/2002
  • Edition description: New Edition
  • Pages: 288
  • Product dimensions: 6.20 (w) x 9.10 (h) x 1.00 (d)

Meet the Author

Amalia Pallares is Assistant Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies and Political Science at the University of Illinois in Chicago.

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Table of Contents

Preface
List of Acronyms and Abbreviations
1 Something Old, Something New: Indigenous Resistance and the New Indio Identity 3
2 Theorizing Indigenous Resistance: Explaining the Shift 25
3 Uncertain Development: Post-agrarian Reform Politics and the New Racial Order 36
4 Representing the Rural Poor: Citizenship and Political Identity in Cotacachi 72
5 Our Own Teniente Politico: Gaining Indigenous Autonomy in Cacha 110
6 Seeking Respeto: Racial Consciousness and National Indian Politics 144
7 From Pluriculturalism to Plurinationalism: The Politics of Disruption 184
8 Indians in the Public Sphere: Comparative Reflections on the Negotiation of Difference 218
App Sixteen Demands Proposed by the CONAIE in the 1990 Uprising 228
Notes 229
Glossary of Spanish and Quichua Terms 249
References 253
Index 267
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