Kapitel
Öffentlich zugänglich
Foreword. The Path back to the Future— the Enduring Legacy of the Revolution
-
Jim Handy
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Figures ix
- Foreword. The Path back to the Future— the Enduring Legacy of the Revolution xi
- Acknowledgments xxi
- Introduction. Revisiting the Revolution in Contemporary Guatemala 1
-
Part I. New Regions
- Chapter 1. “To Wrench Our Rights from La Frutera”. Race, Labor, and Redefining National Belonging on the Caribbean Coast 35
- Chapter 2. The Coastal Laboratory. Milpa, Conservation, and Agrarian Reform 57
- Chapter 3. Arévalo’s Tomorrowland. The Revolutionary Crusade to Build and Defend the New Guatemala on the Petén Frontier 85
-
Part II. New Frames
- Chapter 4. The “Indigenous Problem,” Cold War US Anthropology, and Revolutionary Nationalism. New Approaches to Racial Thinking and Indigeneity in Guatemala 107
- Chapter 5. Youths and Juan José Arévalo’s Democratic Government in Guatemala, 1945–1951 125
- Chapter 6. Rethinking Representation and Periodization in Guatemala’s Democratic Experiment 145
-
Part III. New Actors
- Chapter 7. “A pack of cigarettes or some soap” “Race,” Security, International Public Health, and Human Medical Experimentation during Guatemala’s October Revolution 175
- Chapter 8. “Una obra revolucionaria” Indigenismo and the Guatemalan Revolution, 1944–1954 199
-
Part IV. New Memories
- Chapter 9. Water Power Promise Revisiting Revolutionary DIY 225
- Chapter 10. Reclaiming a Revolution Memory as Possibility in Urban Guatemala 253
- Selected Bibliography 280
- Contributors 287
- Index 290
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- List of Figures ix
- Foreword. The Path back to the Future— the Enduring Legacy of the Revolution xi
- Acknowledgments xxi
- Introduction. Revisiting the Revolution in Contemporary Guatemala 1
-
Part I. New Regions
- Chapter 1. “To Wrench Our Rights from La Frutera”. Race, Labor, and Redefining National Belonging on the Caribbean Coast 35
- Chapter 2. The Coastal Laboratory. Milpa, Conservation, and Agrarian Reform 57
- Chapter 3. Arévalo’s Tomorrowland. The Revolutionary Crusade to Build and Defend the New Guatemala on the Petén Frontier 85
-
Part II. New Frames
- Chapter 4. The “Indigenous Problem,” Cold War US Anthropology, and Revolutionary Nationalism. New Approaches to Racial Thinking and Indigeneity in Guatemala 107
- Chapter 5. Youths and Juan José Arévalo’s Democratic Government in Guatemala, 1945–1951 125
- Chapter 6. Rethinking Representation and Periodization in Guatemala’s Democratic Experiment 145
-
Part III. New Actors
- Chapter 7. “A pack of cigarettes or some soap” “Race,” Security, International Public Health, and Human Medical Experimentation during Guatemala’s October Revolution 175
- Chapter 8. “Una obra revolucionaria” Indigenismo and the Guatemalan Revolution, 1944–1954 199
-
Part IV. New Memories
- Chapter 9. Water Power Promise Revisiting Revolutionary DIY 225
- Chapter 10. Reclaiming a Revolution Memory as Possibility in Urban Guatemala 253
- Selected Bibliography 280
- Contributors 287
- Index 290