Peasants in revolt : a Chilean case study, 1965-1971

Bibliographic Information

Peasants in revolt : a Chilean case study, 1965-1971

by James Petras and Hugo Zemelman Merino ; translated by Thomas Flory

(Latin American monographs / Institute of Latin American Studies, the University of Texas at Austin, no. 28)

Published for the Institute of Latin American Studies by the University of Texas Press, c1972

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Note

"Translated from the author's unpublished ms." - t.p. verso

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Based on extended interviews at the Culipran fundo in Chile with peasants who recount in their own terms their political evolution, this is an in-depth study of peasants in social and political action. It deals with two basic themes: first, the authoritarian structure within a traditional latifundio and its eventual replacement by a peasant-based elected committee, and second, the events shaping the emergence of political consciousness among the peasantry. Petras and Zemelman Merino trace the careers of local peasant leaders, followers, and opponents of the violent illegal land seizure in 1965 and the events that triggered the particular action. The findings of this study challenge the oft-accepted assumption that peasants represent a passive, traditional, downtrodden group capable only of following urban-based elites. The peasant militants, while differing considerably in their ability to grasp complex political and social problems, show a great deal of political skill, calculate rationally on the possibility of success, and select and manipulate political allies on the basis of their own primary needs. The politicized peasantry lend their allegiance to those forces with whom they anticipate they have the most to gain-and under circumstances that minimize social costs. The authors identify the highly repressive political culture within the latifundio-reinforced by the national political system-as the key factor inhibiting overt expressions of political demands. The emergence of revolutionary political consciousness is found to be the result of cumulative experiences and the breakdown of traditional institutions of control. The violent illegal seizure of the farm is perceived by the peasantry as a legitimate act based on self-interest as well as general principles of justice-in other words, the seizure is perceived as a "natural act," suggesting that perhaps two sets of moralities functioned within the traditional system. The book is divided into two parts: the first part contains a detailed analysis of peasant behavior; the second contains transcriptions of peasant interviews. Combined, they give the texture and flavor of insurgent peasant politics.

Table of Contents

Preface 1. Introduction 2. Political Change: The Formation of a New Structure of Authority 3. The Traditional Basis of a Modern Revolt 4. The Process of Political Change 5. The Integration of Agrarian Activity in the Larger Socioeconomic Context 6. Crisis in the System: The Declining Influences and Presting of the Patron 7. Analyses of Cases of Consciousness 8. Culipran, Six Years Later 9. Epilogue Appendices Index

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