Subjects without a Voice: An Approach to the Social History of the Non-indigenous peasantry (rotos) in Postwar La Araucania (1883-1941)

dc.contributor.authorOrdenes Delgado, Mathias
dc.date2019
dc.date.accessioned2021-04-30T16:30:25Z
dc.date.available2021-04-30T16:30:25Z
dc.description.abstractThe poor peasant population who arrived to postwar Araucania was in the middle of a line of fire that had been opened by colonial tensions. Under distress and state repression, these peasants suffered conditions in which they were pressured to live among internal legal disputes and difficulties with Mapuche peoples or with other settlers. In the alternative, they could emigrate in search of better horizons. These problems constituted difficult obstacles that prevented them from building cohesion or forming socio-political organizations. All the same, the farm worker was a key agent in the increasing production and stimulating growth of a rural-urban infrastructure that characterized the Araucania people in these years.
dc.identifier.citationAYER,Vol.,161-187,2019
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositoriodigital.uct.cl/handle/10925/2719
dc.language.isoes
dc.publisherASSOC HISTORIA CONTEMPORANEA & MARCIAL PONS. EDICIONES HISTORIA. S A
dc.sourceAYER
dc.subject.englishpoor peasants
dc.subject.englishAraucania
dc.subject.englishsubaltern
dc.subject.englishsociopolitical organization
dc.subject.englishcolonial tensions
dc.titleSubjects without a Voice: An Approach to the Social History of the Non-indigenous peasantry (rotos) in Postwar La Araucania (1883-1941)
dc.typeArticle
uct.catalogadorWOS
uct.indizacionSSCI
uct.indizacionAHCI
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