Stasis, progress, and evolution:

temporal constructions of indigeneity and nation in the peruvian press (1860–1900)

Autores

  • Karin Riedl Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in Munich Institute for European Ethnology and Cultural Analysis; Research Project “Dissecting Society. Nineteenth-Century Sociographic Journalism and the Formation of Ethnographic and Sociological Knowledge”, funded by the European Research Council e mail: karin.riedl@ekwee.uni-muenchen.de

Palavras-chave:

Peru, 19th century press, indigeneity, temporalization, history of science

Resumo

This article examines temporal constructions of indigeneity and nation in texts from the 19th-century Peruvian press. The results are discussed from a perspective of the history of knowledge and science, illustrating that the emerging sociological thought not only relied on the progressive conception of time from the natural sciences but also on the detemporalization of indigenous ‘Others’ as a contrasting element.

 

ARK CAICYT: https://id.caicyt.gov.ar/ark:/s16688090/ikhzxkkyu 

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.

Downloads

Publicado

2024-09-06

Como Citar

Riedl, K. (2024). Stasis, progress, and evolution: : temporal constructions of indigeneity and nation in the peruvian press (1860–1900). Andes, 35(1), 18–48. Recuperado de https://portalderevistas.unsa.edu.ar/index.php/Andes/article/view/4604

Edição

Seção

Artículos