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DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

Landscaping Patagonia: Spatial History and Nation-Making in Chile and Argentina (The David J. Weber Series in the New Borderlands History

María de los Ángeles Picone

Spatial History and Nation-Making in Chile and Argentina

Barcode 9781469686141
Paperback

Original price £27.53 - Original price £27.53
Original price
£27.53
£27.53 - £27.53
Current price £27.53

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Release Date: 11/02/2025

Genre: History
Sub-Genre: History of the Americas
Label: The University of North Carolina Press
Series: David J. Weber Series in the New Borderlands History
Language: English
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press

Spatial History and Nation-Making in Chile and Argentina
Depicts the story of how people living in northern Patagonia sought to construct versions of Chile and Argentina based on their ideas about and experiences in geographical space in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
In late nineteenth-century Latin America, governments used new scientific, technological, and geographical knowledge not only to consolidate power and protect borders but also to define the physical contours of their respective nations. Chilean and Argentine authorities in particular attempted to transform northern Patagonia, a space they perceived as "desert," through a myriad of nationalizing policies, from military campaigns to hotels. But beyond the urban governing halls of Chile and Argentina, explorers, migrants, local authorities, bandits, and visitors also made sense of the nation by inhabiting the physical space of the northern Patagonian Andes. They surveyed passes, opened roads, claimed land titles or leases, traveled miles to the nearest police station, rode miles on horseback to escape the police, and hiked the landscape.

Maria de los Angeles Picone tells the story of how people living, governing, and traveling through northern Patagonia sought to construct versions of Chile and Argentina based on their ideas about and experiences in geographical space in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. By repositioning the analytical focus from Santiago and Buenos Aires to northern Patagonia, Picone reveals how a wide array of actors, with varying degrees of political, economic, and social power, assigned distinctive—and sometimes conflicting—meanings to space and national identity.