The work of race in colonial Peru

Is ‘race’ an appropriate term to describe the affinities and enmities, or the identities and affiliations in colonial Spanish America, a center of the early modern Iberian realms? In the 1970s and 1980s Patricia Seed (1983), Robert McCaa (1979), John Chance and William Taylor (1979), and other U.S....

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description Is ‘race’ an appropriate term to describe the affinities and enmities, or the identities and affiliations in colonial Spanish America, a center of the early modern Iberian realms? In the 1970s and 1980s Patricia Seed (1983), Robert McCaa (1979), John Chance and William Taylor (1979), and other U.S. historians of Latin America quantified data, for example, collected from 17th- and 18th-century parish records to ascertain whether colonial Latin Americans distinguished themselves according to class, honor, sex, occupation, or caste – or a mixture of these categories. Race, for these scholars, constituted any of the multiple categories employed by Spanish colonizers
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subjects African culture
African studies
American studies
Anthropology
Applied anthropology
Behavioral sciences
Cultural anthropology
Cultural studies
Descendants
Ethnicity
Ethnography
Ethnology
Families
Family members
Human populations
Human societies
Language
Latin American culture
Latin American studies
Lexicology
Linguistics
Manumission
Men
Native culture
Persons
Political science & theory
Population studies
Slave ownership
Slavery
Slaves
Social & cultural anthropology
Social institutions
Social organization
Social sciences
Sociology
Terminology
title The work of race in colonial Peru
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