
Class, Ethnicity, and Community in Southern Mexico
Oaxaca's Peasantries
Colin Clarke(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 9. November 2000
Book
Hardback
333 pages
978-0-19-823387-9 (ISBN)
Description
The state of Oaxaca has been studied intensively by archaeologists, historians, and anthropologists, but this is the first comprehensive overview of rural communities in the twentieth century. The study is rooted in the colonial and post-independence periods; but the text concentrates primarily on the post-revolutionary period, and on the land reform which allowed peasantries to be reconstituted in the lowland areas of the state, as a complement to the traditional peasantries which still existed on communal lands at high altitudes. Peasant lifestyles and production systems are examined, in particular to distinguish between those activities which are subsistence orientated, and those which are geared to the market.
In the last thirty years rural life has been transformed by improved communications, and by services provided by the federal state, but above all by migration to Oaxaca City, other Mexican cities, and the USA. The outcome has been the emergence of class differences at the level of the community; the development of ethnic identities, based on language and regional differences; and the emergence of opposition to the hegemony of the party of government, the PRI. The wide range of issues under discussion will make this volume of interest to geographers, historians, anthropologists, and those involved in development studies.
In the last thirty years rural life has been transformed by improved communications, and by services provided by the federal state, but above all by migration to Oaxaca City, other Mexican cities, and the USA. The outcome has been the emergence of class differences at the level of the community; the development of ethnic identities, based on language and regional differences; and the emergence of opposition to the hegemony of the party of government, the PRI. The wide range of issues under discussion will make this volume of interest to geographers, historians, anthropologists, and those involved in development studies.
Reviews / Votes
A thorough and wide-ranging study, into which Clarke adeptly weaves so many strands. The reader benefits from Clarke's intimate knowledge of Oaxaca, gained over many years of field research and from his meticulous approach to the data ... The volume contains an appealing mix of the qualitative and the quantitative, well supported by maps, diagrams and photographs ... undoubtedly an excellent addition to the Oxford Geographical and Environmental Studies Series. * The Geographical Journal Area *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
15 halftones, numerous maps
Dimensions
Height: 242 mm
Width: 162 mm
Thickness: 23 mm
Weight
726 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-823387-9 (9780198233879)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Author
Professor of Urban and Social GeographyProfessor of Urban and Social Geography, University of Oxford
Content
PART I. HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS OF PEASANTRIES ; PART II. PEASANTS, COMMERCIALIZATION, AND URBANIZATION ; PART III. ETHNICITY, COMMUNITY, AND POLITICS ; PART IV. CONCLUSION