Transnational Perspectives on the Conquest and Colonization of Latin America 2019
DOI: 10.4324/9780429330612-8
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Challenging Colonial Discourses

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Similar material culture to that found at Km 0-Enlace Temuco was unveiled from the domestic sites of La Mocha Island in the Pacific (Quiroz & Fuentes-Mucherl 2012; Quiroz & Sánchez 1997); and surveys and test pits in the area of Valdivia yielded comparable evidence before and during the colonial period (Marín-Aguilera et al 2019, 89–91). This means that the ruka was the materialization of both the social structure and the interpersonal relations of all Reche communities between the fourteenth–fifteenth century and the nineteenth century (Fig.…”
Section: The Reche and The Spanish Empire: Chile Sixteenth–nineteenth Centuriessupporting
confidence: 59%
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“…Similar material culture to that found at Km 0-Enlace Temuco was unveiled from the domestic sites of La Mocha Island in the Pacific (Quiroz & Fuentes-Mucherl 2012; Quiroz & Sánchez 1997); and surveys and test pits in the area of Valdivia yielded comparable evidence before and during the colonial period (Marín-Aguilera et al 2019, 89–91). This means that the ruka was the materialization of both the social structure and the interpersonal relations of all Reche communities between the fourteenth–fifteenth century and the nineteenth century (Fig.…”
Section: The Reche and The Spanish Empire: Chile Sixteenth–nineteenth Centuriessupporting
confidence: 59%
“…Excavated colonial contexts in today's central-southern Chile always display a mixture of Spanish and Reche material culture, the latter often being more numerous (Dillehay 2014, 97; Marín-Aguilera et al 2019; Sauer 2015, 96–111). This indicates that even when the Reche were domestic servants, slaves, or forced labourers in encomiendas , they kept their everyday materiality and could cling to their everyday practices, such as their own cuisine cooked and served in their own ceramics or smoking tobacco from their own pipes, in the case of the men.…”
Section: The Reche and The Spanish Empire: Chile Sixteenth–nineteenth Centuriesmentioning
confidence: 99%