Joanna Crow is lecturer in Latin American Studies at the University of Bristol.
"This outstanding book provides an original and well-documented
perspective on the history of indigenous people in Chile.
Essential."--Choice
"A nuanced and insightful analysis of the myriad ways in which
Mapuche have responded to state notions of ethnic and national
identity."--Journal of Latin American Studies
"Deeply impressive . . . illuminating . . . outstanding. . . . This
sensitively written book provides readers with a full appreciation
of the plight of the Mapuche in modern Chile."--International
Affairs
"This lucidly written book adds to the increasingly rich literature
dealing with strategies employed by indigenous groups in Latin
America as they negotiate with central states for greater cultural
and political authority."--American Historical Review
"[Crow] examines the individual trajectories of key Mapuche
intellectuals that allow the reader to understand Mapuche
(trans)national engagements in the twentieth and twenty-first
centuries. . . . [and] provides news insights into the well-known
tensions between leftist class-based movements and Mapuche
grassroots organizations in the 1960s and 1970s."--Latin American
Research Review
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