Andean Scholarship in the Eighteenth Century: Writers, Networks, and Texts
The eighteenth-century counterparts of Juan de Cuevas Herrera, Jerónimo Lorenzo Limaylla, and Juan Núñez Vela de Rivera lived and wrote in a different social milieu. Preexisting conflicts deepened in the 1700s and new ones appeared, prompting the creation of more comprehensive agendas and forms of l...
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creator | Alcira Dueñas |
description | The eighteenth-century counterparts of Juan de Cuevas Herrera, Jerónimo Lorenzo Limaylla, and Juan Núñez Vela de Rivera lived and wrote in a different social milieu. Preexisting conflicts deepened in the 1700s and new ones appeared, prompting the creation of more comprehensive agendas and forms of legal activism that shed light on the politics of the “Indian nation” and its historical construction through a more sophisticated discourse,cabildopolitics, and Andean lobbying in the core of the Spanish empire. The networks of scholarly and activist collaboration expanded and their issues diversified as Andean intellectuals and leaders in Spain struggled to obtain |
doi_str_mv | 10.2307/j.ctt1d8h9rk.7 |
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ispartof | Indians and Mestizos in the "Lettered City", 2010, p.59 |
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source | Project MUSE Open Access Books; De Gruyter Open Access Books; JSTOR eBooks: Open Access; OAPEN; DOAB: Directory of Open Access Books |
subjects | American studies Anthropology Arts Behavioral sciences Christian philosophy Christianity Church groups Clergy Ecclesiology Ethnography Ethnology Franciscan Order Government Government officials Group behavior Heads of state History of the Americas Human behavior Incan culture Incan history Kings Latin American culture Latin American history Latin American studies Literary criticism Literary genres Literary studies Literature Missionaries Monarchs Nonconformity Political science Practical theology Priests Rebellion Religion Religious literature Religious organizations Social behavior Spiritual belief systems Spiritual leaders Theology Viceroys |
title | Andean Scholarship in the Eighteenth Century: Writers, Networks, and Texts |
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