Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: towards a typology of migration in colonial Spanish America
- 2 Indian migration and community formation: an analysis of congregación in colonial Guatemala
- 3 Migration in colonial Peru: an overview
- 4 Migration processes in Upper Peru in the seventeenth century
- 5 “ … residente en esa ciudad… ”: urban migrants in colonial Cuzco
- 6 Frontier workers and social change: Pilaya y Paspaya (Bolivia) in the early eighteenth century
- 7 Student migration to colonial urban centers: Guadalajara and Lima
- 8 Migration, mobility, and the mining towns of colonial northern Mexico
- 9 Migration patterns of the novices of the Order of San Francisco in Mexico City, 1649–1749
- 10 Migration to major metropoles in colonial Mexico
- 11 Marriage, migration, and settling down: Parral (Nueva Vizcaya), 1770–1788
- 12 Informal settlement and fugitive migration amongst the Indians of late-colonial Chiapas, Mexico
- 13 Migration and settlement in Costa Rica, 1700–1850
- 14 Seventeenth-century Indian migration in the Venezuelan Andes
- 15 Indian migrations in the Audiencia of Quito: Crown manipulation and local co-optation
- Notes
- Index
6 - Frontier workers and social change: Pilaya y Paspaya (Bolivia) in the early eighteenth century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: towards a typology of migration in colonial Spanish America
- 2 Indian migration and community formation: an analysis of congregación in colonial Guatemala
- 3 Migration in colonial Peru: an overview
- 4 Migration processes in Upper Peru in the seventeenth century
- 5 “ … residente en esa ciudad… ”: urban migrants in colonial Cuzco
- 6 Frontier workers and social change: Pilaya y Paspaya (Bolivia) in the early eighteenth century
- 7 Student migration to colonial urban centers: Guadalajara and Lima
- 8 Migration, mobility, and the mining towns of colonial northern Mexico
- 9 Migration patterns of the novices of the Order of San Francisco in Mexico City, 1649–1749
- 10 Migration to major metropoles in colonial Mexico
- 11 Marriage, migration, and settling down: Parral (Nueva Vizcaya), 1770–1788
- 12 Informal settlement and fugitive migration amongst the Indians of late-colonial Chiapas, Mexico
- 13 Migration and settlement in Costa Rica, 1700–1850
- 14 Seventeenth-century Indian migration in the Venezuelan Andes
- 15 Indian migrations in the Audiencia of Quito: Crown manipulation and local co-optation
- Notes
- Index
Summary
In his book, The Frontier in Latin American History, Alistair Hennessy mentions as one characteristic of Latin American border regions the fact that they were “frontiers of inclusion,” meaning that they were areas in which cultural interchange and miscegenation were common. Other authors have also stressed the importance of contact and kin relations among different social and ethnic groups in fringe areas, generally emphasizing sexual relations between white men and non-white women.
Cultural and biological mixtures certainly typified colonial Pilaya y Paspaya, a wine-producing frontier zone in Upper Peru (present-day Bolivia, see Figure 6.1), where in the early eighteenth century the labor force was mostly composed of migrant Indian workers. However, the case of Pilaya y Paspaya is unusual because social change there was clearly more pronounced in one group of Indian migrants, those known as yanaconas, than it was among the majority of immigrants, the forastervs. This chapter will look at the differential change in these two sectors of the Indian labor force and suggest that the reasons for the variation can be traced to the types of relationships that existed between workers and hacendados, and to the extent to which migrants continued to identify with their Andean communities of origin.
The province of Pilaya y Paspaya was noted for its varied terrain which included high altitude flatlands, or punas,in the northwest and malarial lowlands in the south along the Pilaya River. Between these two extremes the province was broken by a series of mountain valleys which became lower and broader as one moved south.
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- Migration in Colonial Spanish America , pp. 112 - 127Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1990
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