Charles F. Walker is the MacArthur Foundation Endowed Chair in International Human Rights and Director of the Hemispheric Institute on the Americas at the University of California, Davis.
[This is] the first extended survey of the causes and the course of
the Tupac Amaru rebellion to appear in English since 1966... [It]
is a lucid and accessible survey in which Walker skillfully blends
narrative with explanation to construct a harrowing story of
violence and atrocities on an enormous scale... [It] will give
Anglophone readers a perceptive and reliable account of the
terrible events that occurred far away from what they naturally
regard as the principal center of action at that time, the British
North American colonies, a mere 322,000 square miles in size, as
compared with an Andean surface area approaching two million. -- J.
H. Elliott * New York Review of Books *
The Tupac Amaru rebellion began in the Spanish viceroyalty of Peru
in 1780 and turned into the largest popular uprising in Spain's
imperial history. To this day, its impact resonates in modern Latin
American politics. The rebellion receives masterly treatment from
Walker. -- Tony Barber * Financial Times *
[This] is a coherent and thorough exploration of the causes,
dynamics, and outcome of the insurgency. It sheds new light on many
important topics and provides overarching interpretive frames...
This book at least comes to attend to a very overdue and tangible
need: a thoughtful, well-researched, and analytically sophisticated
narrative of the most important indigenous insurrection in Andean
history. -- Sergio Serulnikov * Hispanic American Historical Review
*
A solid new history of the Peruvian Indian revolutionary lays out
the roots of his rebellion and its bitter legacy... A readable,
not-too-scholarly story of a significant moment in South American
history. * Kirkus Reviews *
Walker argues convincingly that Tupac Amaru's wife, Micaela
Bastidas, was his fierce, full partner and confidante, running the
rebel camp, overseeing provisions, keeping discipline, and rooting
out spies... It's an interesting and accessible treatment of Peru's
infamously vicious conflict and of its leader, who became a potent
symbol for indigenous rights throughout Latin America. * Publishers
Weekly *
The history of Spain's conquest and three-century grip on
indigenous South America is rife with drama, but nowhere is that
clash of cultures more vivid than in the story of Tupac Amaru II
and his fierce, stubborn war for independence. Walker recreates the
life of this remarkable eighteenth-century rebel with a bold sense
of narrative and a careful eye for detail. Here is a fascinating
study of the prevailing tensions of Tupac Amaru's time-between
conqueror and conquered, white and brown, city and mountain, Old
World and New World-that still vex South America today. -- Marie
Arana, author of Bolivar: American Liberator
A masterly and authoritative history of the rebellion. Walker's
empathetic portraits of Tupac Amaru and Micaela Bastidas are
nuanced and convincing, and his narrative account of the revolt is
both elegantly and engagingly written. His book shows how and why
the rebellion and its aftermath continue to reverberate in Andean
society today. -- Paulo Drinot, author of The Allure of Labor:
Workers, Race, and the Making of the Peruvian State
The Tupac Amaru Rebellion was a pivotal event in the history of the
Americas, yet narrating it clearly and judiciously has evaded
generations of Andean historians. Charles Walker seems to have
broken the curse, and I have no doubt that this excellent book will
instantly become the standard account. -- Kris Lane, author of
Colour of Paradise: The Emerald in the Age of Gunpowder
Empires
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