Civilization And Violence: Regimes of Representation in Nineteenth-Century Colombia
By (Author) Cristina Rojas
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
1st December 2001
United States
General
Non Fiction
303.60986109034
Paperback
256
Width 149mm, Height 229mm, Spine 15mm
Civilizationandviolenceare not necessarily the antagonists we presume-withcivilizationtamingviolence, andviolenceunmakingcivilization. Focusing on postindependence Colombia, this book brings to light the ways in whichviolenceandcivilizationactually intertwined and reinforced each other in the development of postcolonial capitalism.
The narratives ofcivilizationandviolence, Cristina Rojas contends, play key roles in the formation of racial, gender, and class identities; they also provide pivotal logic to both the formation of the nation and the processes of capitalist development. During the Liberal era of Colombian history (1849-1878), a dominant creole elite enforced a "will tocivilization" that sought to create a new world in its own image. Rojas explores different arenas in which this pursuit meant the violent imposition of white, liberal, laissez-faire capitalism. Drawing on a wide range of social theory, Rojas develops a new way of understanding the relationship betweenviolenceand the formation of national identity-not just in the history of Colombia, but also in the broader narratives ofcivilization.