Peruvian History and Culture Abstract
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Chinese Bondage in Peru
CHINESE BONDAGE IN PERU Stewart UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA LIBRARIES COLLEGE LIBRARV DUKE UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS CHINESE BONDAGE IN PERU Chinese Bondage IN PERU A History of the Chinese Coolie in Peru, 1849-1874 BY WATT STEWART DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS 1951 Copyright, 195 i, by the Duke University Press PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY THE SEEMAN PRINTERY, INC., DURHAM, N. C. ij To JORGE BASADRE Historian Scholar Friend Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from LYRASIS IVIembers and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/chinesebondageinOOstew FOREWORD THE CENTURY just passed has witnessed a great movement of the sons of China from their huge country to other portions of the globe. Hundreds of thousands have fanned out southwestward, southward, and southeastward into various parts of the Pacific world. Many thousands have moved eastward to Hawaii and be- yond to the mainland of North and South America. Other thousands have been borne to Panama and to Cuba. The movement was in part forced, or at least semi-forced. This movement was the consequence of, and it like- wise entailed, many problems of a social and economic nature, with added political aspects and implications. It was a movement of human beings which, while it has had superficial notice in various works, has not yet been ade- quately investigated. It is important enough to merit a full historical record, particularly as we are now in an era when international understanding is of such extreme mo- ment. The peoples of the world will better understand one another if the antecedents of present conditions are thoroughly and widely known. -
V. N. 1 Janeiro / Abril 2020 25
ISSN 0103-2178 (impressa) ISSN 2238-3824 (eletrônica) Faculdade de Letras Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais V.25 n . 1 Janeiro / Abril 2020 CALIGRAMA REVISTA DE ESTUDOS ROMÂNICOS V. 25 - N. 1 Jan.-Abr. 2020 Editores convidados: Rômulo Monte Alto (Fale/UFMG) Gonzalo Espino Reluce (Facultad de Letras y Ciencias Humanas/ UNMSM/Peru) ISSN 0103-2178 CALIGRAMA Belo Horizonte v. 25 n. 1 p. 1-164 jan-abr. 2020 COMISSÃO EDITORIAL Aléxia Teles Duchowny Anna Palma Larissa Santos Ciríaco Laureny Aparecida Lourenço da Silva Maria Juliana Gambogi Teixeira CONSELHO EDITORIAL Ana Maria Chiarini (UFMG) Maria Célia Lima-Hernandes (USP/CNPq) Célia Marques Telles (UFBa/CNPq) Maria del Carmen Daher (UFF/CNPq) César Nardelli Cambraia (UFMG/CNPq) Maria Eugênia Olímpio de Oliveira (UFBA) Elisa Maria Amorim Vieira (UFMG) Maria Juliana Gambogi Teixeira (UFMG) Graciela Ravetti (UFMG/CNPq) Maria Maura Cezario (UFF/CNPq) Haydée Ribeiro Coelho (UFMG/CNPq) Mariangela Rios de Oliveira (UFF/CNPq) Ida Lucia Machado (UFMG/CNPq) Martine Kunz (UFC) João Bosco Cabral dos Santos (UFU) Mirta Groppi (USP) Leda Maria Martins (UFMG/CNPq) Pedro Ramos Dolabela Chagas (UESB) Leila de Aguiar Costa (UNIFESP) Leonardo Francisco Soares (UFU) Raquel Meister Ko. Freitag (UFS/CNPq) Lilián Guerrero (UNAM) Rita de Cássia Ribeiro de Queiroz (UEFS) Lineide do Lago S. Mosca (USP) Roberto Mulinacci (U. degli Studi di Bologna) Lúcia Castello Branco (UFMG/CNPq) Roberto Vecchi (Univ. degli Studi di Bologna) Lúcia Fulgêncio (UFMG) Sara Rojo (UFMG/CNPq) Magnólia Brasil (UFF) Saulo Neiva (Université Clermon Ferrand II) Manoel Mourivaldo Santiago-Almeida (USP/CNPq) Sebastião C. Leite Gonçalves (UNESP-SJRP/CNPq) Márcia Arbex (UFMG/CNPq) Sérgio Romanelli (UFSC) Márcia Paraquett (UFBA) Silvia Inés Cárcamo de Arcuri (UFRJ) Marcos Antônio Alexandre (UFMG) Vera Lúcia de C. -
Jamaica in the Tourism Global Value Chain
Jamaica in the Tourism Global Value Chain April 2018 Prepared by Karina Fernandez-Stark and Penny Bamber Contributing researcher: Vivian Couto, Jack Daly and Danny Hamrick Duke Global Value Chains Center, Duke University Global Value Chains Center This research was prepared by the Duke University Global Value Chains Center on behalf of the Organization of American States (OAS). This study is part of the establishment of Small Business Development Centers in the Caribbean. The report is based on both primary and secondary information sources. In addition to interviews with firms operating in the sector and supporting institutions, the report draws on secondary research and information sources. The project report is available at www.gvcc.duke.edu. Acknowledgements The Duke University Global Value Chains Center would like to thank all of the interviewees, who gave generously of their time and expertise, as well as Renee Penco of the Organization of American States (OAS) for her extensive support. The Duke University Global Value Chain Center undertakes client-sponsored research that addresses economic and social development issues for governments, foundations and international organizations. We do this principally by utilizing the global value chain (GVC) framework, created by Founding Director Gary Gereffi, and supplemented by other analytical tools. As a university- based research center, we address clients’ real-world questions with transparency and rigor. www.gvcc.duke.edu. Duke Global Value Chain Center, Duke University © April 2018 -
Correlation and Paleoenvironments Above West T9.3 Tuff, Pisco Formation, Peru Caleb Stanton
Loma Linda University TheScholarsRepository@LLU: Digital Archive of Research, Scholarship & Creative Works Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects 6-2014 Correlation and Paleoenvironments above West T9.3 Tuff, Pisco Formation, Peru Caleb Stanton Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/etd Part of the Geology Commons Recommended Citation Stanton, Caleb, "Correlation and Paleoenvironments above West T9.3 Tuff, Pisco Formation, Peru" (2014). Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects. 219. http://scholarsrepository.llu.edu/etd/219 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by TheScholarsRepository@LLU: Digital Archive of Research, Scholarship & Creative Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects by an authorized administrator of TheScholarsRepository@LLU: Digital Archive of Research, Scholarship & Creative Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. LOMA LINDA UNIVERSITY School of Medicine in conjunction with the Faculty of Graduate Studies ____________________ Correlation and Paleoenvironments above West T9.3 Tuff, Pisco Formation, Peru by Caleb Stanton ____________________ A Thesis submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Master of Science in Geology ____________________ June 2014 © 2014 Caleb Stanton All Rights Reserved Each person whose signature appears below certifies that this thesis in his/her opinion is adequate, in scope and quality, as a thesis for the degree Master of Science. , Chairperson Kevin E. Nick, Associate Professor of Earth and Biological Sciences Ronald Nalin, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Earth and Biological Sciences Leonard R. Brand, Chair and Professor of Earth and Biological Sciences iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The author is thankful to several people and institutions that collaborated for the success of this research. -
Review Essay the Quinto Suyo: New African Diaspora History from Peru
Review Essay The Quinto Suyo: New African Diaspora History from Peru Leo J. Garofalo, Connecticut College Malambo. By Lucía Charún-Illescas. Translated by Emmanuel Harris II. (Chicago: Swan Isle Press, 2004. 230 pp., translator’s note, glossary. $28.00 cloth.) Esclavos de la ciudad letrada: Esclavitud, escritura, y colonialismo en Lima (1650–1700). By José Ramón Jouve Martín. (Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, 2005. 206 pp., bibliography, illustrations. $9.00 paper.) Las máscaras de la representación: El sujeto esclavista y las rutas del racismo en el Perú (1775–1895). By Marcel Velázquez Castro. (Lima: Uni- versidad Nacional de San Marcos, 2005. 288 pp., bibliography, illustra- tions. $6.50 paper.) Breve historia de la esclavitud en el Perú: Una herida que no deja de sangrar. By Carlos Aguirre. (Lima: Fondo Editorial del Congreso del Perú, 2005. 280 pp., illustrations, bibliography, appendixes. $13.00 paper.) Inca rulers divided their empire into four parts, or suyos, and called it Tawantinsuyo, the “Empire of Four Parts.” The term Quinto Suyo (Fifth Part) combines Spanish with Quechua to draw attention to the sizeable, but often overlooked, segment of the Peruvian population with African heritage that claims a history of slavery, resistance, and survival. Quinto Suyo is a term popular with Afro-Peruvian advocacy groups fighting the marginalization of blacks, racial discrimination, and the omission of their history from most textbooks. By highlighting the little-known experiences and contributions of Peru’s black population, the new African diaspora history from Peru continues in this vein of exploring Afro-Peruvians’ deep Ethnohistory 56:2 (Spring 2009) DOI 10.1215/00141801-2008-060 Copyright 2009 by American Society for Ethnohistory 304 Review Essay historical engagement with wider Peruvian society and its institutions and practices of power. -
Machu Picchu Was Rediscovered by MACHU PICCHU Hiram Bingham in 1911
Inca-6 Back Cover-Q8__- 22/9/17 10:13 AM Page 1 TRAILBLAZER Inca Trail High Inca Trail, Salkantay, Lares, Choquequirao & Ausangate Treks + Lima Lares, Choquequirao & Ausangate Treks Salkantay, High Inca Trail, THETHE 6 EDN ‘...the Trailblazer series stands head, shoulders, waist and ankles above the rest. Inca Trail They are particularly strong on mapping...’ Inca Trail THE SUNDAY TIMES CUSCOCUSCO && Lost to the jungle for centuries, the Inca city of Machu Picchu was rediscovered by MACHU PICCHU Hiram Bingham in 1911. It’s now probably MACHU PICCHU the most famous sight in South America – includesincludes and justifiably so. Perched high above the river on a knife-edge ridge, the ruins are High Inca Trail, Salkantay Trek Cusco & Machu Picchu truly spectacular. The best way to reach Lares, Choquequirao & Ausangate Treks them is on foot, following parts of the original paved Inca Trail over passes of Lima City Guide 4200m (13,500ft). © Henry Stedman ❏ Choosing and booking a trek – When Includes hiking options from ALEXANDER STEWART & to go; recommended agencies in Peru and two days to three weeks with abroad; porters, arrieros and guides 35 detailed hiking maps HENRY STEDMAN showing walking times, camp- ❏ Peru background – history, people, ing places & points of interest: food, festivals, flora & fauna ● Classic Inca Trail ● High Inca Trail ❏ – a reading of The Imperial Landscape ● Salkantay Trek Inca history in the Sacred Valley, by ● Choquequirao Trek explorer and historian, Hugh Thomson Plus – new for this edition: ❏ Lima & Cusco – hotels, -
Translating Quechua Poetic Expression in the Andes: Literature, the Social Body, and Indigenous Movements by Maria Elizabeth
Translating Quechua Poetic Expression in the Andes: Literature, the Social Body, and Indigenous Movements by Maria Elizabeth Gonzalez A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Comparative Literature) in The University of Michigan 2010 Doctoral Committee: Professor Philip J. Deloria, Co-Chair Associate Professor Santiago Colas, Co-Chair Professor Bruce Mannheim Professor Javier Sanjines Associate Professor Gustavo Verdesio © Maria Elizabeth Gonzalez 2010 To my inspiration, my son, the shining and brilliant Miguel, to my best friend and mother, a shining star, Leonor, to the shining pillar of stalwart principle, my father Ignacio, to my brothers in every path, Gonzalo and Ricardo, always, to my criollo Conservative Colombian ruling class grandparents whose code of conduct and its core of kindness led my mother, and then me, down all the right paths, Carlos and Elvira the eternal lovers of more than sixty years, to Faustina, my grandmother who minced no words and to whom I gave the gift of lecto-scripted literacy when I was a girl, while she taught me how to know goodness when I see it without erring, sunqulla, and to all my polyglot kin, my allies and friends. ii Acknowledgments To María Eugenia Choque, Ramón Conde, and Carlos Mamani I owe my gratitude for sharing with me what it all meant to them, for inviting me to share in all their THOA activities during my fieldwork, their ground breaking meetings among Indigenous Peoples of the Andean region and beyond; to all the CONAMAQ Mallkus whose presence inspired, and to all the Quechua and Aymara women who shared with good humor sunqulla. -
Rebecca Riger Tsurumi. the Closed Hand: Images of the Japanese in Modern Peruvian Literature
Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature Volume 39 Issue 1 Article 14 2015 Rebecca Riger Tsurumi. The Closed Hand: Images of the Japanese in Modern Peruvian Literature. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue UP, 2012. xv + 314 pp. Miguel Gonzalez-Abellas Washburn University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://newprairiepress.org/sttcl Part of the Japanese Studies Commons, Latin American Languages and Societies Commons, Latin American Literature Commons, and the Modern Literature Commons This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Recommended Citation Gonzalez-Abellas, Miguel (2015) "Rebecca Riger Tsurumi. The Closed Hand: Images of the Japanese in Modern Peruvian Literature. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue UP, 2012. xv + 314 pp.," Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature: Vol. 39: Iss. 1, Article 14. https://doi.org/10.4148/2334-4415.1821 This Book Review is brought to you for free and open access by New Prairie Press. It has been accepted for inclusion in Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature by an authorized administrator of New Prairie Press. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Rebecca Riger Tsurumi. The Closed Hand: Images of the Japanese in Modern Peruvian Literature. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue UP, 2012. xv + 314 pp. Abstract Review of Rebecca Riger Tsurumi. The Closed Hand: Images of the Japanese in Modern Peruvian Literature. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue UP, 2012. xv + 314 pp. Keywords Book review, Japanese culture, Peruvian literature This book review is available in Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature: https://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol39/ iss1/14 Gonzalez-Abellas: Rebecca Riger Tsurumi. -
La Narrativa Peruana Contemporánea Y La Violencia Política
University of Tennessee, Knoxville TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 5-2010 Ambigüedades éticas y estéticas: La narrativa peruana contemporánea y la violencia política Gabriel T Saxton-Ruiz University of Tennessee - Knoxville, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss Part of the Latin American Literature Commons Recommended Citation Saxton-Ruiz, Gabriel T, "Ambigüedades éticas y estéticas: La narrativa peruana contemporánea y la violencia política. " PhD diss., University of Tennessee, 2010. https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/749 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized administrator of TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. To the Graduate Council: I am submitting herewith a dissertation written by Gabriel T Saxton-Ruiz entitled "Ambigüedades éticas y estéticas: La narrativa peruana contemporánea y la violencia política." I have examined the final electronic copy of this dissertation for form and content and recommend that it be accepted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, with a major in Modern Foreign Languages. Luis C. Cano, Major Professor We have read this dissertation and recommend its acceptance: Michael Handelsman, Nuria Cruz-Cámara, Jana Morgan Accepted for the Council: Carolyn R. Hodges Vice Provost and Dean of the Graduate School (Original signatures are on file with official studentecor r ds.) To the Graduate Council: I am submitting herewith a dissertation written by Gabriel T. -
Welcome to LI
Welcome to LI MFilled with opportunities 2 Begin your tour here... Lima 360° Gastronomic Lima Lima, from the The table where 04 Andes to the 14 it all comes world together History Gastronomy guide An ancient The taste of Lima 06 city 16 Map Showcase 08 Historic A crucible of center 18 products Cultural Callao 10 industries 20 The historic All the arts port Adventure Tours Outdoor Lima itinerary 12 Lima 22 Schedule 24 Lima calendar A city that looks out over the Pacific Ocean from a natural balcony, home to nearly 10 million people with countless stories, immigrants from a thousand different places. A city with a past and future, with innovators and entrepreneurs, with art, handcrafts, and industry. A city that tastes delicious and knows how to celebrate life. Lima, a city filled with opportunities. 04 Jorge Chávez Internacional Lima 360º Airport Principal Port: El Callao Lima, from the Andes to the world Located on the central coast of South America, Lima brings together the variety and complexity of an entire country in a single vibrant and captivating metropolis. It is the only city that looks out over the sea yet begins in the Andes. 5000 years of history Spanish 0-5000 meters 19.4º founding: meters average 18 January 1535 9 886 647 154 Lima has inhabitants average elevation temperature (INEI, 2015) nd 2 Highest ranked in Latin America (2016) 18 848 207 passengers 176 865 aircraft Every Lima Politically, Lima 27 refers to a region, a airlines province, a city: Metropolitan + Info: lima-airport.com Lima, and a district. -
Canadian E-Discovery and Records Professionals* DONALD C
From Peruvian Guano to Electronic Records: Canadian E-Discovery and Records Professionals* DONALD C. FORCE RÉSUMÉ L’augmentation exponentielle des documents numériques a mené les archi vistes et les gestionnaires de documents à développer des approches de plus en plus sophistiquées pour gérer et conserver ces documents, non seulement pour appuyer les opérations quotidiennes d’une organisation, mais aussi pour faciliter le repérage de ces documents dans l’éventualité d’un procès. Le processus d’administration de la preuve électronique a ajouté des nouvelles pressions aux responsabilités des professionnels de l’information, puisque les organisations sont tenues responsables des documents qu’elles rendent disponibles aussi bien que de ceux qu’elles ne peuvent pas fournir. En Amérique du Nord, les décisions des tribunaux américains par rapport aux ques tions de l’administration de la preuve électronique ont grandement éclipsé celles des tribunaux canadiens. Cet article fournit une perspective historique de l’émergence de l’administration de la preuve électronique au Canada et commente des liens entre les professionnels de l’information et les nombreuses décisions judiciaires canadiennes, de même qu’avec le processus d’administration de la preuve électronique. ABSTRACT The exponential growth of electronic records has led archivists and rec ords managers to develop ever more sophisticated approaches to manage and preserve these records, not only to support an organization’s daily operations but to alleviate the records retrieval burden in the event that the organization encounters litigation. The electronic discovery process has added additional pressure to the responsibilities of records professionals by holding organizations accountable for the documentation they disclose as well as that which they cannot produce. -
Views and Literary Or Film Awards
(De)humanizing Narratives of Terrorism in Spain and Peru Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Melissa Doran, M.A. Graduate Program in Spanish and Portuguese The Ohio State University 2014 Dissertation Committee: Ulises Juan Zevallos-Aguilar, Advisor Ignacio Corona Aurélie Vialette Copyright by Melissa Doran 2014 2 Abstract Both Spain and Peru experienced protracted violent conflicts between insurgent groups and State forces during the second half of the twentieth century. In Spain, this involved Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (ETA), a radical Basque nationalist organization which sought Basque autonomy via armed struggle in a conflict which lasted from 1959 until 2011. In Peru, the insurgent threat was represented by Sendero Luminoso, a Maoist guerrilla insurgency based in the Peruvian highlands that sought drastic sociopolitical change within Peru. Sendero Luminoso launched what they deemed a people’s war in 1980, and the bloody conflict that ensued continued until 1992. The damage caused by each of these conflicts was monumental, both in terms of the loss of human life and damage to infrastructure in both countries. In this dissertation I examine the depiction of these conflicts in a selection of Peruvian and Spanish novels and films. I argue that each work promotes a certain version of the conflict it describes, and that this can be revealed through an analysis of the humanizing and dehumanizing discourses at play in the representation of the actors in both of these conflicts. From Peru, I will examine Santiago Roncagliolo’s novel Abril rojo (2006) and Fabrizio Aguilar’s film Paloma de papel (2003).