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| Book Review | Journal of World History, 14.4 | The History Cooperative
14.4  
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December, 2003
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Book Review



La Indianidad: The Indigenous World before Latin Americans. By HERNÁN HORNA.Princeton, N.J.: Markus Wiener Publishers, 2001. xi +179 pp. $38.95 (cloth); $18.95 (paper).

      Historians face a daunting task when they attempt to write synthetic analyses of the indigenous peoples of Latin America. Even in this age of global narratives, the histories of the civilizations that inhabited the Americas before the European conquest resist broad categorizations, in part because of the incredible diversity of the region in the pre-Columbian period, and in part because of the proclivities of Latin American academics, who typically eschew broad generalizations in favor of the particular. This is the challenge that Hernán Horna faces in his effort to produce a text that explores the story of indigenous Latin Americans from the time of the first human settlement through to the end of the colonial period. 1
      Horna's clearest purpose in the text is to provide a counternarrative to a tradition within Western scholarship that denigrated indigenous peoples as culturally and racially inferior, ignored the accomplishment of pre-Columbian civilizations, and, even worse, suggested that the European conquest rescued indigenous cultures from their own savagery. In this endeavor he provides a catalog of the accomplishments of the Mayan, Mexican, and Incan civilizations, and argues that it was a unique constellation of pathogenic, technological, and strategic factors that allowed for the conquest. He further laments the loss of cultures and practices that dominated the region prior to the sixteenth century. Bringing up the oft-cited argument that in Incan times there was neither poverty nor hunger in the Andes, he decries the fact that "modern" agriculture and economies have failed to feed Andean peoples for several centuries. . . .

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