Abstract
This essay compares two communities of common origin that now dwell in separate rural lowland South American settings, one in the Bolivian Chaco and the other in the Paraguayan Chaco (maps 1 and 2). South America's Gran Chaco is sparsely populated, averaging one person per three square kilometers (Censo Nacional Indígena [Paraguay], 2002). Nevertheless, the present essay takes as its analytic-theoretical point of departure a phrase invoked by Michael Warner in his 1999 book on queer publics in New York City: “Urban space is always a host space” (1999: 190).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,History
Reference58 articles.
1. From the Enemy's Point of View
2. Los Chiriguanos e Izozós;Schmidt;Revista de la Sociedad Científica del Paraguay,1938
Cited by
4 articles.
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