<em>Murió comiendo rata</em>: Power Relations in Pre-Shining Path Ayacucho, Peru (1940-1980)

  • Miguel La Serna University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Resumen

This essay explores the local dynamics of race and class in Ayacucho, Peru on the eve of the Shining Path guerrilla insurgency. Covering the forty-year span leading up to the armed conflict, this case study cautions against portraying indigenous-mestizo, comunero-vecino relations as purely antagonistic. While some mestizo power holders did in fact clash with Ayacucho's indigenous peasantry in the years preceding the insurrection, others exhibited a remarkable adherence to Andean codes of reciprocity and paternalism. During the period of political violence that followed, Andean peasants tended to submit abusive mestizo elites to Shining Path's justice while defending and deferring to the authority of those who had respected these cultural codes. This approach challenges scholars to look beyond racial and class conflict and consider the degree to which amicable power relationships also impact historical processes.

Biografía del autor/a

Miguel La Serna, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Miguel La Serna es profesor asistente en la Universidad de North Carolina en Chapel Hill. Su libro, The Corner of the Living: Ayacucho on the Eve of the Shining Path Insurgency (UNC Press), que se publicará en 2012, versa sobre los vínculos históricos entre la cultura, el poder, y la violencia política en la cordillera en Perú.
Publicado
2012-01-31
Sección
Artículos / Articles