Lexington Books
Pages: 204
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-7936-1811-5 • Hardback • January 2022 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
978-1-7936-1812-2 • eBook • January 2022 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Catalina Muñoz-Rojas is associate professor of history at Universidad de los Andes.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Cultural Politics and State Formation during the Liberal Republic
Chapter 1: “A Vastly Transcending Mission”: The Cultural Politics of Music during Colombia’s Liberal Republic, 1930–1946
Chapter 2: “A Broad Path of Popular Action”: Forging Citizenship through the Stage and the Screen
Chapter 3: Hygiene, the “Social Question,” and the Making of a Racialized, Classed and Gendered Citizenship
Chapter 4: Who is Colombian? Nationalizing the Past and the Present
Epilogue
Incisive and creative, historian Catalina Muñoz follows Liberal politicians, bureaucrats, and intellectuals in the manner of an ethnographer using the paper trail they left behind. This critical study is beautifully crafted. Muñoz convincingly demonstrates that the simultaneous promotion of national unity and inclusion worked hand in glove with the maintenance of vertical ties for the legitimacy of the ruling elite, making the history of Colombia during the decades prior to the escalation of violence less exceptional than we have assumed. This is a must-read for anyone interested in how democracy is an ongoing, contingent project in a permanent state of expansion and contraction.
— Lina Britto, Northwestern University; author of Marijuana Boom. The Rise and Fall of Colombia’s First Drug Paradise