TY - BOOK AU - Arias,Arturo AU - Lovell,W.George AU - Lutz,Christopher H. AU - McCreery,David AU - Smith,Carol A. AU - Watanabe,John M. AU - Woodward,Jr TI - Guatemalan Indians and the State: 1540 to 1988 T2 - LLILAS Symposia on Latin America Series SN - 9781477304914 AV - F1465.3.G6G82 1990 U1 - 972.81/00497 PY - 2021///] CY - Austin : PB - University of Texas Press, KW - HISTORY / General KW - bisacsh N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Maps --; Figure --; Tables --; Preface --; 1. Introduction: Social Relations in Guatemala over Time and Space --; Part 1: Historical Formation --; 2. Core and Periphery in Colonial Guatemala --; 3. Changes in the Nineteenth-Century Guatemalan State and Its Indian Policies --; 4. Origins of the National Question in Guatemala: A Hypothesis --; 5. State Power, Indigenous Communities, and Land in Nineteenth-Century Guatemala, 1820-1920 --; 6. State and Community in Nineteenth-Century Guatemala: The Momostenango Case --; Part 2: Twentieth-Century Struggles --; 7· Ethnic Images and Strategies in 1944 --; 8. The Corporate Community, Campesino Organizations, and Agrarian Reform: 1950-1954 --; 9. Enduring Yet Ineffable Community in the Western Periphery of Guatemala --; 10. Class Position and Class Consciousness in an Indian Community: Totonicapán in the 1970s --; 11. Changing Indian Identity: Guatemala's Violent Transition to Modernity --; 12. Conclusion: History and Revolution in Guatemala --; Bibliography --; Index; restricted access N2 - Violence in Central America, especially when directed against Indian populations, is not a new phenomenon. Yet few studies of the region have focused specifi cally on the relationship between Indians and the state, a relationship that may hold the key to understanding these conflicts. In this volume, noted historians and anthropologists pool their considerable expertise to analyze the situation in Guatemala, working from the premise that the Indian/state relationship is the single most important determinant of Guatemala’s distinctive history and social order. In chapters by such respected scholars as Robert Cormack, Ralph Lee Woodward, Christopher Lutz, Richard Adams, and Arturo Arias, the history of Indian activism in Guatemala unfolds. The authors reveal that the insistence of Guatemalan Indians on maintaining their distinctive cultural practices and traditions in the face of state attempts to eradicate them appears to have fostered the development of an increasingly oppressive state. This historical insight into the forces that shaped modern Guatemala provides a context for understanding the extraordinary level of violence that enveloped the Indians of the western highlands in the 1980s, the continued massive assault on traditional religious and secular culture, the movement from a militarized state to a militarized civil society, and the major transformations taking place in Guatemala’s traditional export-oriented economy. In this sense, Guatemalan Indians and the State, 1540 to 1988 provides a revisionist social history of Guatemala UR - https://doi.org/10.7560/727441 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9781477304914 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9781477304914/original ER -