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Indigenous Communists and Urban Intellectuals in Cayambe, Ecuador (1926–1944)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2004

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Abstract

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This case study provides an example of how people from two fundamentally different cultures (one rural, indigenous, Kichua-speaking and peasant, and the other urban, white, Spanish-speaking and professional) overcame their differences to struggle together to fight social injustices. Rather than relating to each other on a seemingly unequal basis, the activists recognized their common interests in fighting against the imposition of an international capitalist system on Ecuador's agrarian economy. Emerging out of that context, activists framed collective interests, identities, ideas, and demands as they worked together to realize common goals. Their actions challenge commonly held assumptions that leftist activists did not understand indigenous struggles, or that indigenous peoples remained distant from the goals of leftist political parties. Rather, it points to how the two struggles became intimately intertwined. In the process, it complicates traditional understandings of the role of “popular intellectuals”, and how they interact with other activists, the dominant culture, and the state.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2004 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis

Footnotes

This essay is based primarily on research in the Fondo Junta Central de Asistencia Pública (JCAP) of the Archivo Nacional de Medicina del Museo Nacional de Medicina “Dr Eduardo Estrella”, in Quito, Ecuador. Special thanks go to Antonio Crespo for facilitating access to that collection of government documents. Sandra Fernández Muñoz and Jorge Canizares lent access to the private collection of Leonardo J. Muñoz, an early leftist leader, which provides a counterpart to the JCAP documents. Additional primary-source documentation of this history is from Quito's main daily newspaper, El Comercio, and the Biblioteca Ecuatoriana Aurelio Espinosa Pólit [hereafter BEAEP] in Cotocollao, Ecuador.