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dc.contributor.author
Vezub, Julio Esteban  
dc.contributor.author
Healey, Mark  
dc.contributor.other
Larson, Carolyne R.  
dc.date.available
2021-07-28T20:20:30Z  
dc.date.issued
2020  
dc.identifier.citation
Vezub, Julio Esteban; Healey, Mark; "Occupy Every Road and Prepare for Combat": Mapuche and Tehuelche Leaders Face the War in Patagonia; University of New Mexico Press; 2020; 43-70  
dc.identifier.isbn
978-0-82636207-0  
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/11336/137295  
dc.description.abstract
Francisco P. Moreno, the Argentine explorer and naturalist, heard this slogan at a parliament of confederated caciques in the Indigenous Government of Las Manzanas in 1880. Taking this statement as a point of departure, this chapter reviews the history of Argentine military campaigns of national expansion in Patagonia from the perspective of Mapuche and Tehuelche caciques. We explore how they faced this defensive war, how they positioned themselves against the aggression launched on their territories and populations, and how they perceived and explained the radical violence of nation-states in their correspondence with other indigenous leaders and with military and civil authorities in Argentina and Chile. By conceiving the Conquest of the Desert in the 1870s and 1880s as a social war, or better stated as multiple overlapping wars which played out differently by region and by indigenous polity, we will identify the strategies and tactics of the major caciques or lonkos, their policies and diplomacy, and their alliances and negotiations with national states. This exploration will build on correspondence and other sources, such as ethnographic testimonies from the 19th and 20th century, which allow us to draw closer to the protagonists point of view on these genocidal wars and contrast it with canonical accounts. As a hypothesis, we argue that indigenous leaders were effective in coordinating actions, protecting their people, limiting the extent of mortality and the dismantling of social structures, and negotiating terms of subordination with the newly powerful national state.  
dc.format
application/pdf  
dc.language.iso
eng  
dc.publisher
University of New Mexico Press  
dc.rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess  
dc.rights.uri
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ar/  
dc.subject
CONQUEST  
dc.subject
DESERT  
dc.subject
WAR  
dc.subject
MAPUCHE  
dc.subject
PATAGONIA  
dc.subject.classification
Otras Historia y Arqueología  
dc.subject.classification
Historia y Arqueología  
dc.subject.classification
HUMANIDADES  
dc.title
"Occupy Every Road and Prepare for Combat": Mapuche and Tehuelche Leaders Face the War in Patagonia  
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion  
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart  
dc.type
info:ar-repo/semantics/parte de libro  
dc.date.updated
2021-04-12T15:50:26Z  
dc.journal.pagination
43-70  
dc.journal.pais
Estados Unidos  
dc.journal.ciudad
Albuquerque  
dc.description.fil
Fil: Vezub, Julio Esteban. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Centro Nacional Patagónico. Instituto Patagónico de Ciencias Sociales y Humanas; Argentina  
dc.description.fil
Fil: Healey, Mark. University of Connecticut; Estados Unidos  
dc.relation.alternativeid
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/url/https://unmpress.com/books/conquest-desert/9780826362070  
dc.conicet.paginas
28  
dc.source.titulo
The Conquest of the Desert. Argentina's Indigenous Peoples and the Battle for History