Archive for the ‘Latin America’ Category
American Quarterly 62, 3 (2010). Special Issue: Alternative Contact: Indigeneity, Globalism, and American Studies. Edited by Paul Lai and Lindsey Claire Smith.
Filed under: Empire, Hawaii, Latin America, New Zealand, Pacific, United States | Closed
Mapuche Prisoners on Hunger Strike to Demand Talks via IPS ipsnews.net. The hunger strike is a product of “the desperation of the Mapuche community members, who see all of the doors closing and that there is no political will to engage in talks and recognise the existence of a conflict” over land, Fernando Lira, the […]
Filed under: Latin America, Political developments | Closed
Brazilian historians are well familiar with the Brazilianists: American scholars who travel to the Latin American country’s archives looking, one might say, to encounter themselves as Americans. From her interesting H-Net review, ‘The Pitfalls of the Transnational Approach to Race and Nation in Brazil and the United States’, which looks at Seigel’s Uneven Encounters: Making […]
Filed under: Latin America, Scholarship and insights | Closed
Andrew Dawson and Matthew Lange, ‘Dividing and Ruling the World? A Statistical Test of the Effects of Colonialism on Postcolonial Civil Violence’, Social Forces 88, 2, 2009 abstract To test claims that postcolonial civil violence is a common legacy of colonialism, we create a dataset on the colonial heritage of 160 countries and explore whether […]
Filed under: Africa, Asia, Australia, Éire, Canada, Empire, Genocide, Hawaii, Israel/Palestine, Latin America, Scholarship and insights, Southern Africa, United States | Closed
From BBC UK: Peru’s indigenous Amazon groups say they plan to launch their own political party ahead of elections next year. […] Peru’s large indigenous minority has historically had little representation in national politics. The new party will be called the Alliance for an Alternative for Humanity or APHU. […] “We want to seize the […]
Filed under: Latin America, Political developments | Closed
Fernanda Peñaloza, ‘On Skulls, Orgies, Virgins and the Making of Patagonia as a National Territory: Francisco Pascasio Moreno’s Representations of Indigenous Tribes’, Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 87, 4 (2010,), pp. 455-472 Abstract/Resumen: This paper focuses on the anxiety of possession that underlies the anthropological inquisitiveness of the nineteenth-century Argentine explorer Francisco Pascasio Moreno. Moreno’s Viaje […]
Filed under: gender, Latin America, Scholarship and insights | Closed
scs flyer
Be a friend: print out one of our flyers and stick it up in your faculty or department wall.
Filed under: Africa, art, Asia, Australia, Éire, Call for papers, Canada, Empire, gender, Genocide, Hawaii, Israel/Palestine, Latin America, law, media, New Zealand, Political developments, postcolonialism, public lecture, Quote, Scholarship and insights, Seminar, Southern Africa, Sovereignty, Uncategorized, United States, wacky, Website | Closed
Jared Diamond and James A. Robinson (ed), Natural Experiments of History (Harvard University Press, 2010): Some central questions in the natural and social sciences can’t be answered by controlled laboratory experiments, often considered to be the hallmark of the scientific method. This impossibility holds for any science concerned with the past. In addition, many manipulative […]
Filed under: Africa, Australia, Canada, Latin America, Scholarship and insights, United States | Closed
Kirstin Norget, ‘A cacophony of authochtony: representing indigeneity in Oaxacan popular mobilisaton’, The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 15(1): 116 – 143 via indigenous peoples issues and resources Abstract: Este artículo examina la movilización popular y social en Oaxaca, México a través del ejemplo del movimiento de la Asamblea Popular de los Pueblos […]
Filed under: Latin America, Scholarship and insights | Closed
Lorenzo Veracini: Rezension zu: Isfahani-Hammond, Alexandra: White Negritude. Race, Writing, and Brazilian Cultural Identity. New York 2008, in: H-Soz-u-Kult, 26.02.2010. : Transference of cultural practices by close contact allows whites to write “black”, a move that, besides the ultimate (albeit one step removed) indigenisation of the Euro-Brazilian, enables another transfer: the disappearance of the black […]
Filed under: Latin America, Scholarship and insights | Closed