When the saints rule, the Indians hide. The role of the Catholic Church during the Conquest of the Desert

Latin America is characterized by its unity and diversity, whether geographical, political, economic, social or cultural. The starting point for this unity and diversity can be considered the constitution of Latin America, that is like it or not, its conquest and colonization. From Mexico to what wo...

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Autor principal: Riquelme, Franco
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Facultad de Derecho y Ciencias Sociales. Universidad Nacional del Comahue 2024
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Acceso en línea:https://revele.uncoma.edu.ar/index.php/revistadelafacultad/article/view/5755
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spelling I22-R128-article-57552024-12-20T17:46:05Z When the saints rule, the Indians hide. The role of the Catholic Church during the Conquest of the Desert Cuando los santos gobiernan, los indios se esconden. El papel de la Iglesia Católica durante la Conquista del Desierto Riquelme, Franco Latin America colonization indigenous issues oligarchy religious missionaries religious confessionalization América Latina colonización cuestión indígena oligarquía misioneros religiosos confesionalización religiosa Latin America is characterized by its unity and diversity, whether geographical, political, economic, social or cultural. The starting point for this unity and diversity can be considered the constitution of Latin America, that is like it or not, its conquest and colonization. From Mexico to what would later (currently) be Argentina, there are common historical processes, such as dependence on a capitalist world-economy, the colonial and then modern imposition of political and social structures, and of course, the issue of the indigenous peoples. What has been said above does not exhaust socio-historical studies but it does intend to trigger the reflection on the historicity of historical processes intrinsic to the region, that is, the same situation (whether conquest or colonization) with different results. In this sense, I aim to study the relationship between the oligarchy and the religious missionaries with the indigenous peoples at the end of the 19th century in different regions of Argentina -without losing sight of the whole of Latin America. América Latina se caracteriza por su unidad y diversidad, ya sea geográfica, política, económica, social y cultural. Esta relación de unidad y diversidad para establecer un punto de partida es a partir de la constitución de América Latina, mal que nos pese, a partir de la conquista y colonización. Desde México hasta lo que sería después (actualmente) la Argentina, hay procesos históricos comunes, entre ellos, la dependencia dentro de una economía-mundo capitalista, la imposición colonial y luego moderna de estructuras políticas y sociales, y por cierto, la cuestión indígena. Lo dicho anteriormente no agota los estudios sociohistóricos pero sí propone pensar y reflexionar acerca de la historicidad de los procesos históricos dependiendo de la región, es decir, misma situación (ya sea conquista y colonización) con diferentes resultados. En este sentido, propongo estudiar diferentes regiones de Argentina ─sin perder la proposición de la totalidad latinoamericana─ a partir de la relación entre la oligarquía y los misioneros religiosos hacia los pueblos indígenas a finales del siglo XIX. Facultad de Derecho y Ciencias Sociales. Universidad Nacional del Comahue 2024-12-20 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://revele.uncoma.edu.ar/index.php/revistadelafacultad/article/view/5755 (En)clave Comahue. Revista Patagónica de Estudios Sociales; Vol. 31 Núm. 30 (2024); 149-176 2545-6393 2545-6466 spa https://revele.uncoma.edu.ar/index.php/revistadelafacultad/article/view/5755/62616 Derechos de autor 2024 Franco Riquelme https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
institution Universidad Nacional del Comahue
institution_str I-22
repository_str R-128
container_title_str Repositorio de Revistas Electrónicas REVELE (UNComahue)
language Español
format Artículo revista
topic Latin America
colonization
indigenous issues
oligarchy
religious missionaries
religious confessionalization
América Latina
colonización
cuestión indígena
oligarquía
misioneros religiosos
confesionalización religiosa
spellingShingle Latin America
colonization
indigenous issues
oligarchy
religious missionaries
religious confessionalization
América Latina
colonización
cuestión indígena
oligarquía
misioneros religiosos
confesionalización religiosa
Riquelme, Franco
When the saints rule, the Indians hide. The role of the Catholic Church during the Conquest of the Desert
topic_facet Latin America
colonization
indigenous issues
oligarchy
religious missionaries
religious confessionalization
América Latina
colonización
cuestión indígena
oligarquía
misioneros religiosos
confesionalización religiosa
author Riquelme, Franco
author_facet Riquelme, Franco
author_sort Riquelme, Franco
title When the saints rule, the Indians hide. The role of the Catholic Church during the Conquest of the Desert
title_short When the saints rule, the Indians hide. The role of the Catholic Church during the Conquest of the Desert
title_full When the saints rule, the Indians hide. The role of the Catholic Church during the Conquest of the Desert
title_fullStr When the saints rule, the Indians hide. The role of the Catholic Church during the Conquest of the Desert
title_full_unstemmed When the saints rule, the Indians hide. The role of the Catholic Church during the Conquest of the Desert
title_sort when the saints rule, the indians hide. the role of the catholic church during the conquest of the desert
description Latin America is characterized by its unity and diversity, whether geographical, political, economic, social or cultural. The starting point for this unity and diversity can be considered the constitution of Latin America, that is like it or not, its conquest and colonization. From Mexico to what would later (currently) be Argentina, there are common historical processes, such as dependence on a capitalist world-economy, the colonial and then modern imposition of political and social structures, and of course, the issue of the indigenous peoples. What has been said above does not exhaust socio-historical studies but it does intend to trigger the reflection on the historicity of historical processes intrinsic to the region, that is, the same situation (whether conquest or colonization) with different results. In this sense, I aim to study the relationship between the oligarchy and the religious missionaries with the indigenous peoples at the end of the 19th century in different regions of Argentina -without losing sight of the whole of Latin America.
publisher Facultad de Derecho y Ciencias Sociales. Universidad Nacional del Comahue
publishDate 2024
url https://revele.uncoma.edu.ar/index.php/revistadelafacultad/article/view/5755
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