Shaky Colonialism

This book PDF is perfect for those who love History genre, written by Charles F. Walker and published by Duke University Press which was released on 26 May 2008 with total hardcover pages 280. You could read this book directly on your devices with pdf, epub and kindle format, check detail and related Shaky Colonialism books below.

Shaky Colonialism
Author : Charles F. Walker
File Size : 45,6 Mb
Publisher : Duke University Press
Language : English
Release Date : 26 May 2008
ISBN : 9780822388920
Pages : 280 pages
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Shaky Colonialism by Charles F. Walker Book PDF Summary

Contemporary natural disasters such as Hurricane Katrina are quickly followed by disagreements about whether and how communities should be rebuilt, whether political leaders represent the community’s best interests, and whether the devastation could have been prevented. Shaky Colonialism demonstrates that many of the same issues animated the aftermath of disasters more than 250 years ago. On October 28, 1746, a massive earthquake ravaged Lima, a bustling city of 50,000, capital of the Peruvian Viceroyalty, and the heart of Spain’s territories in South America. Half an hour later, a tsunami destroyed the nearby port of Callao. The earthquake-tsunami demolished churches and major buildings, damaged food and water supplies, and suspended normal social codes, throwing people of different social classes together and prompting widespread chaos. In Shaky Colonialism, Charles F. Walker examines reactions to the catastrophe, the Viceroy’s plans to rebuild the city, and the opposition he encountered from the Church, the Spanish Crown, and Lima’s multiracial population. Through his ambitious rebuilding plan, the Viceroy sought to assert the power of the colonial state over the Church, the upper classes, and other groups. Agreeing with most inhabitants of the fervently Catholic city that the earthquake-tsunami was a manifestation of God’s wrath for Lima’s decadent ways, he hoped to reign in the city’s baroque excesses and to tame the city’s notoriously independent women. To his great surprise, almost everyone objected to his plan, sparking widespread debate about political power and urbanism. Illuminating the shaky foundations of Spanish control in Lima, Walker describes the latent conflicts—about class, race, gender, religion, and the very definition of an ordered society—brought to the fore by the earthquake-tsunami of 1746.

Shaky Colonialism

Contemporary natural disasters such as Hurricane Katrina are quickly followed by disagreements about whether and how communities should be rebuilt, whether political leaders represent the community’s best interests, and whether the devastation could have been prevented. Shaky Colonialism demonstrates that many of the same issues animated the aftermath of

Get Book
Shaky Colonialism

A social history of the earthquake-tsunami that struck Lima in October 1746, looking at how people in and beyond Lima understood and reacted to the natural disaster.

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By the early 1700s, the vast scale of the Spanish Empire led crown authorities to rely on local institutions to carry out their political agenda, including religious orders like the Franciscan mission of Santa Rosa de Ocopa in the Peruvian Amazon. This book follows the Ocopa missions through the eighteenth

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World War One in Southeast Asia

An original study of the First World War's impact in Southeast Asia, extending our understanding of the conflict as a global phenomenon.

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Spaniards in the Colonial Empire

Spaniards in the Colonial Empire traces the privileges,prejudices, and conflicts between American-born and European-bornSpaniards, within the Spanish colonies in the Americas from thesixteenth to early nineteenth centuries. • Covers three centuries of Spanish colonial power,beginning in the sixteenth century • Explores social tension between creole and peninsularfactions, connecting this friction

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Real and imagined encounters among Aboriginal peoples, European colonists, Chinese migrants, and mixed-race populations produced racial anxieties that underwrote crossracial contacts in the salmon canneries, the illicit liquor trade, and the (white) slavery scare in late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century British Columbia. Colonial Proximities explores the legal and spatial strategies of rule

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Latin America in Colonial Times

This second edition is a concise history of Latin America from the Aztecs and Incas to Independence.

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