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Our Time is Now : Race and Modernity in Postcolonial Guatemala

Part of the Cambridge Latin American Studies series
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Postcolonial histories have long emphasized the darker side of narratives of historical progress, especially their role in underwriting global and racial hierarchies.

Concepts like primitiveness, backwardness, and underdevelopment not only racialized and gendered peoples and regions, but also ranked them on a seemingly naturalized timeline - their 'present' is our 'past' - and reframed the politics of capitalist expansion and colonization as an orderly, natural process of evolution towards modernity.

Our Time is Now reveals that modernity particularly appealed to those excluded from power, precisely because of its aspirational and future orientation.

In the process, marginalized peoples creatively imagined diverse political futures that redefined the racialized and temporal terms of modernity.

Employing a critical reading of a wide variety of previously untapped sources, Julie Gibbings demonstrates how the struggle between indigenous people and settlers to manage contested ideas of time and history as well as practices of modern politics, economics, and social norms were central to the rise of coffee capitalism in Guatemala and to twentieth century populist dictatorship and revolution.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108733484 / 9781108733489
Paperback / softback
972.81
14/04/2022
United Kingdom
English
426 pages : illustrations (black and white), maps (black and white).
Reprint. Print on demand edition. Originally published: 2020.