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list price: $39.95
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
category: Social Science
published: Sep 2007
ISBN:9781552382295
publisher: University of Calgary Press

Negotiating Identities in Modern Latin America

edited by Hendrik Kraay, contributions by Stephen Neufeld; Gregg Bocketti; Louise Guenther; Ronald Harpelle; Maria Eugenia Brockmann Dannenmaier; Maria Cecilia Velasco e Cruz; Jennifer Manthei; Denise Fay Brown; Marjorie Snipes & Julie Gibbings

tagged: human geography, popular culture
Description

Negotiating Identities in Modern Latin America explores some of the ways in which people define their membership in groups and their collective identity, as well as some of the challenges to the definition and maintenance of that identity. This interdisciplinary collection of essays, addressing such diverse topics as the history of Brazilian football and the concept of masculinity in the Mexican army, provides new insights into questions of identity in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Latin America.

The essays cover a wide range of countries in the region, from Mexico to Argentina, and analyze a variety of identity-bearing groups, from small-scale communities to nations. Hendrik Kraay has gathered contributions from historians and anthropologists. Their individual methodological and theoretical approaches combine to paint a picture of Latin American society that is both complex and compelling. The chapters focus on the day-to-day construction of identity among ordinary people, from American nationals living in Peru to indigenous communities in Argentina.

About the Authors

Hendrik Kraay


Stephen Neufeld


Gregg Bocketti


Louise Guenther


Ronald Harpelle


Maria Eugenia Brockmann Dannenmaier


Maria Cecilia Velasco e Cruz


Jennifer Manthei


Denise Fay Brown


Marjorie Snipes


Julie Gibbings

Editorial Review

This collection encourages us to reflect upon the uses and meanings of identity and the methodologies and research questions historians and anthropologists might employ to get at such an intangible topic. All the more admirable, since, though the state seems present in each chapter (even when just in the background), it is the quotidian identity that most of these works seem to unveil

—Cynthia E. Milton, University of Toronto Quarterly

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