Peru is a country with a rich, ancient and diverse history. Whether
one is exploring Peruvian history to prepare for travel there, or to become
more acquainted with one’s world, A Brief History of Peru is worth
considering as a reading option. Examining a foreign culture will expand a
reader’s understanding and empathy, as well as illuminating one’s own culture
by revealing similarities and differences.
Within the space of 300 pages, Christine Hunefeldt takes her
reader from the period of Inca Civilization’s predominance, through Spain’s
conquest and colonization, into the post-imperialist present with all the
conflict and turmoil associated with independence. A “brief history” indeed.
This exploration is punctuated by the nation’s history of racial injustice
against native Quechua- and Aimara-speaking indigenous populations. Like most
places in the world, economic injustice accompanies racism. In Peru, this
combined injustice is fostered by the nation’s oligarchy, which composes 1% of
the population. Most of the wealthy are of Spanish descent. The composition of
this racial/economic group stands in contrast to Peru’s majority, 50% of whom
lived below poverty level as of 2005. The author, who has a well-developed
sense of injustice, is certainly up to the task of displaying these
characteristics of regional history. She is of a liberal-progressive bent. The
last section of the last chapter in the book is a two-page political screed on
new indigenous movements which include new agendas like “the redefinition of
territory; the defense of indigenous languages…defense of cultural values,
collective rights and ways of living” (Hunefeldt, p. 288). These truly
legitimate issues appear alongside some questionable issues like “the defense
of biodiversity and nature” (Hunefeldt, p. 288). Environmental defense is
usually imposed by privileged white westerners on indigenous populations. It is
true that some individuals within native cultures are concerned with industrial
misuse of the land on which they live. However, the majority of indigenous
peoples want the material goods and prosperity that westerners have and are
even less inhibited than we around destroying the environment to get it.
Christine Hunefeldt is an able historian. She marshals the
facts into an understandable chronology and writes comprehensibly. She is not a
theorist with the sophistication of Jurgen Habermas. She does not discern
patterns with the analytical originality of Eric Hobsbawm. She does not write a
compelling narrative with the skill of Dena Goodman. In fact, there are periods
in the book that drag like those middle school social studies classes which
made many hate history. Her accounts of colonial bureaucracy, or early
Twentieth Century import/export differentials, are civics hell. Skim such areas
to avoid drudgery. But in less than 300 pages, one will obtain a plethora of
information and a basic grasp of Peruvian history. If this is your goal, A
Brief History of Peru will not disappoint.
Hunefeldt, Christine. A Brief History of Peru. New
York: Lexington Associates, 2010.
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