Race,long discounted in Andean ethnography as relatively unimportant, is a social fact of great salience in the Andes. This essay introduces the articles in the special issues on race in the Andes with an overview of the interrelated intellectual histories of racism in the Andes, Europe, and North America, from colonial proto-racism, to the totalising theories of the 19th century, to the heterogeneous 'neo-racism' found in the Andes today, in which both these earlier ideaas and contemporary culural racisms are at holme. It concludes with a discussion of an oppositional ideology found in some indigenous communities, in which race is somatic but not biological in origin.
CITATION STYLE
Weismantel, M., & Eisenman, S. F. (1998). Race in the Andes: global movements and popular ontologies. Bulletin of Latin American Research, 17(2), 121–142. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0261-3050(97)00084-3
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