Nightwatch: The Politics of Protest in the Andes

Author:   Orin Starn
Publisher:   Duke University Press
ISBN:  

9780822323211


Pages:   344
Publication Date:   24 May 1999
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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Nightwatch: The Politics of Protest in the Andes


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Author:   Orin Starn
Publisher:   Duke University Press
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.626kg
ISBN:  

9780822323211


ISBN 10:   0822323214
Pages:   344
Publication Date:   24 May 1999
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

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Reviews

Based on ethnography of rarely-accomplished nuance and historical depth, Nightwatch is a vivid, elegant, and enlightening account of the rise and development of what has come to be widely recognised as the most important rural movement to emerge in Latin America since the late 1960s. Orin Starn has profound knowledge and understanding of both the Peruvian situation today and its recent and distant history. He writes in direct and artfully crafted prose, informed by the most up-to-date theoretical debates. This book will be of great interest not just to those who care about Peru and Latin America but also to scholars across anthropology, cultural studies, political science and history Arturo Escobar, University of Massachusetts at Amherst and author of Encoutnering development: the making and unmaking of the Third World Orin Starn's Nightwatch is the most thoroughly researched and perceptive study to date on peasant crime patrols and grassroots justice assemblies in northern Peru during the 1970s and 1980s. The book conveys cultural complexity in an engaging manner. Ethnographically rich and analytically astute, Nightwatch provides a remarkably vivid sense of peasant culture, politics, and justice in times of great difficulty Steven J. Stern, author of Shining and Other Paths Fascinating for any reader, and indispensable for anyone seeking to understand modern Peru Alma Guillermoprieto, author of The heart that bleeds: Latin America now Nightwatch is an elegantly crafted and important book that deserves a readership that extends far beyond the confines of Latin American anthropology and Peruvian studies. It successfully meshes a gripping narrative with an engaging discussion of key themes, ranging from the nature of fieldwork to peasant resistance and globalisation. More important, it brings to light one of the most important Latin American peasant movements of the twentieth century, until now overshadowed by the dramatic impact of the Shining Path on Peru. Paulo Drinot, Left History Against the blemished backdrop of anthropology, Nightwatch stands as evidence of [Starn's] own thoughtful striving for disciplinary renewal. Andrew Orta, Anthropological Quarterly Orin Starn tells the story well, with compelling ethnography drawing on over a decade of fieldwork in the region, but the work is also theoretically sophisticated and historically informed. In the best tradition of political anthropology, the dialogue between detailed local knowledge and the national and international political contexts in which these developments took place is never forgotten... This well-written, accessible account has plenty to engage both the Peruvianist and the more general reader. Penelope Harvey, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute This is an excellent book, exceptionally well-written, provocative and challenging and a must read for the layman or specialist interested in the dynamics of the Andean world. Roger P. Davis, South Eastern Latin Americanist [A] sensitive, wide-ranging account of one of the largest recent popular grassroots movements in Latin America... Stuart Rockefeller, American Ethnologist [A]n important commentary on the self-empowerment of a peasantry recently freed from serfdom on haciendas and their creation of what is characterized as the most important massive movement in recent Peruvian history. S. L. Rozman, Choice An in-depth account... This masterful work is captivating and honest, filled with engaging anecdotes yet analytically informed by classic and recent theoretical works... Nightwatch is an extensive and impressive study of the rondas of the north. Jennifer S. Holmes, Latin American Research Review [E]ngagingly written... Nightwatch provides a most interesting mix of people, institutions, and culture that makes it a very worthwhile read. Numerous photos breathe even more life into the written word. Ward Stavig, The Historian [W]ritten in an accessible and engaging style ... interestingly enlivened with photographs, drawings, and quotations from songs popular among the villagers... [H]ighly recommended both to Andean specialists and to others interested in relations between villagers and the modern state. The combination of clarity of exposition and respect for complexity makes it an excellent text for readers at all levels from bright undergraduate to professional practitioner. Ray Abrahams, Cambridge Anthropology Nightwatch is highly engaging and well written, with a tight narrative structure ... And evocative fluid prose. Peter Wogan, Identities


Based on ethnography of rarely-accomplished nuance and historical depth, Nightwatch is a vivid, elegant, and enlightening account of the rise and development of what has come to be widely recognised as the most important rural movement to emerge in Latin America since the late 1960s. Orin Starn has profound knowledge and understanding of both the Peruvian situation today and its recent and distant history. He writes in direct and artfully crafted prose, informed by the most up-to-date theoretical debates. This book will be of great interest not just to those who care about Peru and Latin America but also to scholars across anthropology, cultural studies, political science and history Arturo Escobar, University of Massachusetts at Amherst and author of Encoutnering development: the making and unmaking of the Third World Orin Starn's Nightwatch is the most thoroughly researched and perceptive study to date on peasant crime patrols and grassroots justice assemblies in northern Peru during the 1970s and 1980s. The book conveys cultural complexity in an engaging manner. Ethnographically rich and analytically astute, Nightwatch provides a remarkably vivid sense of peasant culture, politics, and justice in times of great difficulty Steven J. Stern, author of Shining and Other Paths Fascinating for any reader, and indispensable for anyone seeking to understand modern Peru Alma Guillermoprieto, author of The heart that bleeds: Latin America now Nightwatch is an elegantly crafted and important book that deserves a readership that extends far beyond the confines of Latin American anthropology and Peruvian studies. It successfully meshes a gripping narrative with an engaging discussion of key themes, ranging from the nature of fieldwork to peasant resistance and globalisation. More important, it brings to light one of the most important Latin American peasant movements of the twentieth century, until now overshadowed by the dramatic impact of the Shining Path on Peru. Paulo Drinot, Left History Against the blemished backdrop of anthropology, Nightwatch stands as evidence of [Starn's] own thoughtful striving for disciplinary renewal. Andrew Orta, Anthropological Quarterly Orin Starn tells the story well, with compelling ethnography drawing on over a decade of fieldwork in the region, but the work is also theoretically sophisticated and historically informed. In the best tradition of political anthropology, the dialogue between detailed local knowledge and the national and international political contexts in which these developments took place is never forgotten... This well-written, accessible account has plenty to engage both the Peruvianist and the more general reader. Penelope Harvey, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute This is an excellent book, exceptionally well-written, provocative and challenging and a must read for the layman or specialist interested in the dynamics of the Andean world. Roger P. Davis, South Eastern Latin Americanist [A] sensitive, wide-ranging account of one of the largest recent popular grassroots movements in Latin America... Stuart Rockefeller, American Ethnologist [A]n important commentary on the self-empowerment of a peasantry recently freed from serfdom on haciendas and their creation of what is characterized as the most important massive movement in recent Peruvian history. S. L. Rozman, Choice An in-depth account... This masterful work is captivating and honest, filled with engaging anecdotes yet analytically informed by classic and recent theoretical works... Nightwatch is an extensive and impressive study of the rondas of the north. Jennifer S. Holmes, Latin American Research Review [E]ngagingly written... Nightwatch provides a most interesting mix of people, institutions, and culture that makes it a very worthwhile read. Numerous photos breathe even more life into the written word. Ward Stavig, The Historian [W]ritten in an accessible and engaging style ... interestingly enlivened with photographs, drawings, and quotations from songs popular among the villagers... [H]ighly recommended both to Andean specialists and to others interested in relations between villagers and the modern state. The combination of clarity of exposition and respect for complexity makes it an excellent text for readers at all levels from bright undergraduate to professional practitioner. Ray Abrahams, Cambridge Anthropology Nightwatch is highly engaging and well written, with a tight narrative structure ... And evocative fluid prose. Peter Wogan, Identities


""Based on ethnography of rarely-accomplished nuance and historical depth, Nightwatch is a vivid, elegant, and enlightening account of the rise and development of what has come to be widely recognised as the most important rural movement to emerge in Latin America since the late 1960s. Orin Starn has profound knowledge and understanding of both the Peruvian situation today and its recent and distant history. He writes in direct and artfully crafted prose, informed by the most up-to-date theoretical debates. This book will be of great interest not just to those who care about Peru and Latin America but also to scholars across anthropology, cultural studies, political science and history"" Arturo Escobar, University of Massachusetts at Amherst and author of Encoutnering development: the making and unmaking of the Third World ""Orin Starn's Nightwatch is the most thoroughly researched and perceptive study to date on peasant crime patrols and grassroots justice assemblies in northern Peru during the 1970s and 1980s. The book conveys cultural complexity in an engaging manner. Ethnographically rich and analytically astute, Nightwatch provides a remarkably vivid sense of peasant culture, politics, and justice in times of great difficulty"" Steven J. Stern, author of Shining and Other Paths ""Fascinating for any reader, and indispensable for anyone seeking to understand modern Peru"" Alma Guillermoprieto, author of The heart that bleeds: Latin America now ""Nightwatch is an elegantly crafted and important book that deserves a readership that extends far beyond the confines of Latin American anthropology and Peruvian studies. It successfully meshes a gripping narrative with an engaging discussion of key themes, ranging from the nature of fieldwork to peasant resistance and globalisation. More important, it brings to light one of the most important Latin American peasant movements of the twentieth century, until now overshadowed by the dramatic impact of the Shining Path on Peru."" Paulo Drinot, Left History ""Against the blemished backdrop of anthropology, Nightwatch stands as evidence of [Starn's] own thoughtful striving for disciplinary renewal."" Andrew Orta, Anthropological Quarterly ""Orin Starn tells the story well, with compelling ethnography drawing on over a decade of fieldwork in the region, but the work is also theoretically sophisticated and historically informed. In the best tradition of political anthropology, the dialogue between detailed local knowledge and the national and international political contexts in which these developments took place is never forgotten... This well-written, accessible account has plenty to engage both the Peruvianist and the more general reader."" Penelope Harvey, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute ""This is an excellent book, exceptionally well-written, provocative and challenging and a must read for the layman or specialist interested in the dynamics of the Andean world."" Roger P. Davis, South Eastern Latin Americanist ""[A] sensitive, wide-ranging account of one of the largest recent popular grassroots movements in Latin America..."" Stuart Rockefeller, American Ethnologist ""[A]n important commentary on the self-empowerment of a peasantry recently freed from serfdom on haciendas and their creation of what is characterized as the most important massive movement in recent Peruvian history."" S. L. Rozman, Choice ""An in-depth account... This masterful work is captivating and honest, filled with engaging anecdotes yet analytically informed by classic and recent theoretical works... Nightwatch is an extensive and impressive study of the rondas of the north."" Jennifer S. Holmes, Latin American Research Review ""[E]ngagingly written... Nightwatch provides a most interesting mix of people, institutions, and culture that makes it a very worthwhile read. Numerous photos breathe even more life into the written word."" Ward Stavig, The Historian ""[W]ritten in an accessible and engaging style ... interestingly enlivened with photographs, drawings, and quotations from songs popular among the villagers... [H]ighly recommended both to Andean specialists and to others interested in relations between villagers and the modern state. The combination of clarity of exposition and respect for complexity makes it an excellent text for readers at all levels from bright undergraduate to professional practitioner."" Ray Abrahams, Cambridge Anthropology ""Nightwatch is highly engaging and well written, with a tight narrative structure ... And evocative fluid prose."" Peter Wogan, Identities


Author Information

Orin Starn is Associate Professor of Cultural Anthropology at Duke University. He is a coeditor of The Peru Reader: History, Culture, Politics, also published by Duke University Press.

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