Workshop of revolution : plebeian Buenos Aires and the Atlantic world, 1776-1810

Bibliographic Information

Workshop of revolution : plebeian Buenos Aires and the Atlantic world, 1776-1810

Lyman L. Johnson

Duke University Press, 2011

  • : cloth

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Includes bibliographical references (p. [367]-389) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The plebeians of Buenos Aires were crucial to the success of the revolutionary junta of May 1810, widely considered the start of the Argentine war of independence. Workshop of Revolution is a historical account of the economic and political forces that propelled the artisans, free laborers, and slaves of Buenos Aires into the struggle for independence. Drawing on extensive archival research in Argentina and Spain, Lyman L. Johnson portrays the daily lives of Buenos Aires plebeians in unprecedented detail. In so doing, he demonstrates that the world of Spanish colonial plebeians can be recovered in reliable and illuminating ways. Johnson analyzes the demographic and social contexts of plebeian political formation and action, considering race, ethnicity, and urban population growth, as well as the realms of work and leisure. During the two decades prior to 1810, Buenos Aires came to be thoroughly integrated into Atlantic commerce. Increased flows of immigrants from Spain and slaves from Africa and Brazil led to a decline in real wages and the collapse of traditional guilds. Laborers and artisans joined militias that defended the city against British invasions in 1806 and 1807, and they defeated a Spanish loyalist coup attempt in 1809. A gravely weakened Spanish colonial administration and a militarized urban population led inexorably to the events of 1810 and a political transformation of unforeseen scale and consequence.

Table of Contents

Preface ix Introduction 1 1. Plebeian City: Late Colonial Buenos Aires 17 2. The Structures of working Life: Masculinity, Sociability, Skill, and Honor 51 3. Remembered Scripts and Atlantic Colonial Realities: The Shoemakers and Silversmiths of Buenos Aires 85 4. Collective Obligations, Self-Interest, and Race: The Guilds of Silversmiths and Shoemakers Fail 117 5. The "French Conspiracy" of 1795 149 6. The Reproduction of Working-Class Life: Needing, Wanting, Having, and Saving 179 7. Working-Class Wages, Earnings, and the Organization of Urban Work 215 8. An Empire Lost: The Plebe Transformed 249 Epilogue 283 Notes 297 Bibliography 367 Index 391

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