Synopsis
This book traces the process of self-organization and emergence within Ecuador's Indigenous movement from 1998 to 2008 for the Zápara nationality, one of the smallest Indigenous groups in Ecuador, to explore the complex role that multiculturalism has played in local identity politics.
Review
An excellent text for courses on globalization and Indigeneity, language disappearance and revitalization, or Indigenous movements in the Americas... --Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 2012
In an ethnography that is both detailed and succinct, Viatori's One State, Many Nations: Indigenous rights Struggles in Ecuador presents a textbook case of contemporary indigenous activism. --Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology, Nov. 2012
This work makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of indigenous activism and the challenges that smaller indigenous groups face in attempting to achieve important goals....This book will be of interest not only to Ecuadorianists but also to scholars interested in indigenous activism more generally, and because it is short and readable it would be an excellent book for course adoption. Viatori has set a fine precent for further studies of this nature. --Erin E. O'Connor, The Americas: A Quarterly Review of Latin American History, 69:3, January 2013
This work makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of indigenous activism and the challenges that smaller indigenous groups face in attempting to achieve important goals....This book will be of interest not only to Ecuadorianists but also to scholars interested in indigenous activism more generally, and because it is short and readable it would be an excellent book for course adoption. Viatori has set a fine precent for further studies of this nature. --Erin E. O'Connor, The Americas: A Quarterly Review of Latin American History, 69:3, January 2013
The significant strengths of Viatori's study of indigenous activism coupled with the activism by powerful and well-educated others on behalf of this indigenous emergent ethnicity is the detailed description of microlevel interpersonal cooperation and competition, collaboration and opposition. --Norman E. Whitten, Jr. American Anthropologist, vol. 115, no. 4, Dec. 2013
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