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The Peru Reader: History, Culture, Politics (The Latin America Readers)

The Peru Reader: History, Culture, Politics (The Latin America Readers)
by Ivan Degregori, Robin Kirk
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The Peru Reader: History, Culture, Politics (The Latin America Readers)Publisher: Duke University Press
Salesrank: 42498
List Price: $25.95
Our Price: $17.08
Used Price: $15.57
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Customer Reviews:
A must read for the history of Peru (2007-10-03)
This is a great book for the history of Peru. The chronological order is perfect. All the essays are wonderful to read. I think I learned more about Peru with this book than any other.The Peru Reader: Start Early! (2007-01-09)
What a wonderfully literate collection of writings which give the traveler (actual or armchair) both the information and flavor he needs to introduce him to this complex country. I started too close to my departure for Peru to read every word, but found myself unable to decide what to skip. What seemed a boring topic turned out to be fascinating! So, start early — the book is pretty bulky to carry on your trip.The Peru Reader: The best Peru travelers companion (2006-06-28)
I took this book to Peru on a trip to see the great archeological sites. I was blown awqy by the information I got from this book. Not only was I informed on so many topics but introduced to several brilliant Peruvian authors. The book was so strong I wept deeply over the history of the native peoples, I was amazed at the strength to survive under the most difficult political and cultural situations. The book was so well written that all the history and politics, not my usual reading, soaked in painlesssly, actually joyfully. I wish there were such a great book to take on every trip I go on, it enhanced my trip a million times over.Hefty, in-depth anthology (2004-12-19)
Perhaps this book’s overwhelming for a newcomer. But, if you have a basic knowledge of Peru already, this over 500-page collection of stories, chapters from academic books, poems, folktales, political reportage, popular journalism and interviews, and historical and anthropological coverage satisfies the need in English for a comprehensive starter for further research and reading on many topics.

Organised into chronological order, sections progress from pre-Inca, Inca, Conquest, Post-Conquest, Colonial and Republican periods into the 19c. These intersperse scholarly investigations with narratives. Then, politics, the Shining Path, the drug wars, the urban squatters turning land into new communities, activists among the feminist, evangelical, and gay communities, liberation theology and local leadership, and life among both villages and in Lima add chapters that comprise about half of the total text.

Most rewarding for me were the chronicles by the Incas after the Conquest, John Hemming’s chapter on Atahualpa and Pizarro, folktales bookending the text from early and Amazon peoples, Steve J. Stern’s analysis of post-Conquest creolisation and its discontents, Manuel Cordova’s tale of life a century ago after he was abducted by Amazon indians, and the fascinating account by Catherine J. Allen from her The Hold Life Has all about coca-leaf ritual bonding. Anyone who associates coca only with cola or crack might learn a lot from this anthropological description of how chemicals sustain fellowship, and also force gatherings to acknowledge etiquette and social class distinctions–even under the influence!

The literary offerings, poems, novel excerpts, and stories, are less intriguing, but worthwhile. I sense some of these–as with the Vargas Llosa chapter from his novel Conversations in the Cathedral–were a bit wrenched out of a more rewarding context.

I wish the past ten years, the downfall of Fujimori and the attempt by Toledo to stabilise a tottering state, could have been included in an updated edition, which could also look at the fate of Guzmán and his Shining Path cohorts. Life in the diaspora–a million Peruvians live abroad–would also be enlightening. But, until these hypothetical additions, this is a promising book for anyone curious about Perú. As the back jacket asserts, there’s nothing like this in English–or Spanish.

Also recommended: Robin Kirk’s The Monkey’s Paw for 1980s/early 90s Peru; Gustavo Gorriti’s history, translated by Kirk, on the Shining Path, and Vargas Llosa’s memoir of running for president, Fish Out of Water; his novelisation of Guzman, The Real Life of Alejandro Mayta; his mystery novel also set in this period, Death in the Andes.

This is a great book if you are intrested in Peru (1998-10-24)
This book tells about it all from all sorts of people from the conquiers to the Indeans plus the shing path and the Presedint 

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The Peru Reader: History, Culture, Politics (The Latin America Readers)

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