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From
Subjects to Citizens Honor, Culture, and Politics in Arequipa, Peru,
1780-1854
Sarah C. Chambers
September 1999 | 6 x 9 inches
World
History
Hardback: $62.00 SH
ISBN: 978-0-271-01901-7
Paperback: $26.00 SH
ISBN: 978-0-271-01902-4
Offering
a corrective to previous views of Spanish-American independence, this
book shows how political culture in Peru was dramatically transformed
in this period of transition and how the popular classes as well as
elites played crucial roles in this process.
Honor, underpinning the legitimacy of Spanish rule and a social
hierarchy based on race and class during the colonial era, came
to be an important source of resistance by ordinary citizens to
repressive action by republican authorities fearful of disorder.
Claiming the protection of their civil liberties as guaranteed by
the constitution, these "honorable" citizens cited their hard work
and respectable conduct in justification of their rights, in this
way contributing to the shaping of republican discourse. Prominent
politicians from Arequipa, familiar with these arguments made in
courtrooms where they served as jurists, promoted at the national
level a form of liberalism that emphasized not only discipline but
also individual liberties and praise for the honest workingman.
But the protection of men's public reputations and their patriarchal
authority, the author argues, came at the expense of women, who
suffered further oppression from increasing public scrutiny of their
sexual behavior through the definition of female virtue as private
morality, which also justified their exclusion from politics. The
advent of political liberalism was thus not associated with greater
freedom, social or political, for women.
Sarah
C. Chambers is Assistant Professor of History at the University
of Minnesota.