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9781478034407 Academic Inspection Copy

The Good Road

A K'iche' Revolutionary Theopolitics
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The Good Road situates Guatemala's early 1980s Indigenous uprising and the genocide that crushed it in a five-hundred-year history of Indigenous resistance to colonization and exploitation. Drawing on decades of archival and ethnographic research, Carlota McAllister traces the emergence of conciencia, a Spanish word meaning both consciousness and conscience, in a Maya-K'iche'-speaking community called Chupol after the Pan-American highway was built through it in 1956. Foregrounding the role of the Catholic Church in mediating state-Indigenous relations and promoting rural transformation in Cold War Guatemala, McAllister shows how Chupolenses came to embrace revolutionary armed struggle as both a moral and political imperative. She argues that Chupol's participation in revolution unfolded through Indigenous organizational processes and political concepts animated by longstanding Indigenous theopolitical critiques of the organization of power in the Americas. The Good Road shows how, despite the uprising's bloody defeat, the theopolitical imperative to build a "good road" forward continues to animate Indigenous politics in twenty-first-century Guatemala.
Carlota McAllister is an anthropologist and Associate Professor of Environmental and Urban Change at York University. She is the coeditor of War by Other Means: Aftermath in Post-Genocide Guatemala, also published by Duke University Press.
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