University Press of America
Pages: 244
Trim: 5½ x 8¾
978-0-7618-2069-7 • Hardback • August 2001 • $115.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7618-2070-3 • Paperback • August 2001 • $87.99 • (£68.00)
Paul Charney is Assistant Professor of Colonial and Contemporary Latin America at Frostburg State University, Maryland.
1 List of Maps
2 List of Tables
3 List of Abbreviations
4 Preface
5 Acknowledgments
6 Introduction
7 An Andean Coastal Society Under Inca and Spanish Rule
8 Land Tenure Practices
9 Indian Leadership and the Community
10 The Indian Cofradía
11 Holding Together the Indian Family
12 Conclusion
13 Appendixes
14 Glossary
15 Bibliography
16 Index
Vastly documented and impeccably researched?>
— Eugene Pinero, University of Wisconson-Eau Claire; Itinerario
Charney's work supports other research on colonial indigenous society, and he makes good use of the pioneering work of Maria Rostworowski, as well as more recent scholarship on the coats and Lima. <...Charney does make a strong argument that forLima's Indians, a people whose prehispanic ethnic backgroung was imploded, indio and all of its connotations became a powerful vehicle of identity.
— Ward Stavig, University of South Florida; Hahr - Colonial Period
....a welcome addition to an increasing literature on colonial Lima. . . . Charney is well-suited for upper-division undergraduate and graduate students and above.
— A. B. Osorio, University of Florida; Choice Reviews
Vastly documented and impeccably researched…
— Eugene Pinero, University of Wisconson-Eau Claire; Itinerario
Charney's work supports other research on colonial indigenous society, and he makes good use of the pioneering work of Maria Rostworowski, as well as more recent scholarship on the coats and Lima.<...Charney does make a strong argument that for "Lima's Indians," a people whose prehispanic ethnic backgroung was imploded, indio and all of its connotations became a powerful vehicle of identity.
— Ward Stavig, University of South Florida; Hahr - Colonial Period