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Civilization and Barbarism: Cattle Frontiers in Latin America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Silvio R. Duncan Baretta
Affiliation:
University of Pittsburgh
John Markoff
Affiliation:
University of Pittsburgh

Extract

INTRODUCTION

In looking at yesterday's frontiers (or at today's industrialized world), social analysts tend to see violence as a straightforward and uncomplicated phenomenon: when openly used, it is a direct way of settling disputes; when it is not used but available, it is a necessary—and, at least in the short run, sufficient—condition of domination. As a background condition violence is readily forgotten. Such is the case even in the study of the various affronts to authority that are lumped under the rubric of‘collective behavior.’ One speaks of violent ‘episodes’ arising from the ‘breakdown’ of various routine social mechanisms. By the same token, all the interesting problems in political theory seem to lie in the area of how to control people in every other conceivable manner: through the establishment of a normative consensus, through ideologies, through the creation of common interests, or through bargains and deals. Sufficient consideration is not usually given to the varied and subtle effects of these ways in which the capacity for violence is structured in social life. But consequences follow for any society from the presence or absence of full-time military specialists, from the forms of their organization, from the regional distribution of control of organized violence, from the advantages and disadvantages associated with the use of force, and from the norms associated with such use.

Type
Land, Markets, and Social Structure
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1978

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References

We thank John Marx, Santiago Real de Azúa, Daniel Regan, Harold Sims and João Carlos Brum Torres for valuable suggestions.

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12 On the role of the mestizo as mediator see Wolf, Eric, ‘Aspects of Group Relations in a Complex Society: Mexico,’ American Anthropologist 58 (1956) 1065–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For an extended example see Robles, Vito AlessioCoahuila y Texas en la epoca colonial (México: Editorial Cultura, 1938), pp. 118 ff.Google Scholar

13 On the difficulties faced by frontier administrators see Lattimore, , ‘The Frontier,’ p. 126.Google Scholar

14 Robles, Alessio (op. cit., p. 165) documents Spanish deliveries of food and clothes to Indians in northern Mexico in order to maintain peace.Google Scholar

15 Lattimore, , op. cit., p. 108Google Scholar

16 Erikson, Kai T., Wayward Puritans (New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1966)Google Scholar. The examination of the complex relationships between territorial and nonterritorial forms of social exclusion is a difficult–and fascinating–area for theoretical and empirical explorations. Some of the relationships are more or less obvious, such as the tendency of frontiers to attract deviants of several kinds. Besides this recruitment effect, one can suggest that the type of territorial frontier a nation has bears on the kind of political deviant its authorities are likely to ‘discover’ and label. The presence of a powerful enemy ‘on the other side,’ for instance, will have authorities concerned with an internal ‘fifth column.’ Examples of this process are commonplace in today's world. A systematic examination of the subject is lacking, even though suggestions can be found in Erikson, , op. cit., pp. 157–59.Google Scholar

17 Mörner, , La Corona, pp. 2123, 29.Google Scholar

18 These ‘Spaniards’ almost certainly include mestizos who had been assimilated to the white group, as was common in the early period of colonization. For a discussion of the inclusiveness of the term Spaniard at this time see Möner, , La Corona, p. 113.Google Scholar

19 Ibid., pp. 27–35, 155–60.

20 During the brief period in which mestizos were not yet sufficiently numerous to constitute a major problem for the obsessed categorizers of the developing ‘society of castes,’ recognition of illegitimate children and assimilation into Spanish society happened often. Mörner, Magnus, Race Mixture in the History of Latin America (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1967), 2533, 40ff, 55.Google Scholar

21 Konetzke, Richard, ‘Los mestizos en la legislation colonial,’ in Revista de Estudios Politicos 112 (1960), 113–29, esp. 124ffGoogle Scholar. Magnus Morner suggests that the increase in the numbers of mestizos helped to set them apart as a special group (‘El mestizaje en la historia de Ibero-América. Informe sobre el estado actual de la investigation,’ in El mestizaje en la historia de Iber-America [Mexico: Instituto Panamericano de Geografia e Historia, 1961], p. 33.)Google Scholar

22 Mörner, , La Corona, pp. 30, 105.Google Scholar

23 Portuguese racial policy, according to Mörner, responded to the same ‘basic conditions and motivations’ as the Spanish one: see Race Mixture, pp. 4952.Google Scholar

24 René Echaiz offers the interesting suggestion that frontier mestizos were even more stigmatized than their counterparts in central areas, since they resulted from unions with very primitive, nomadic Indians, themselves far more stigmatized than the pacified Indians of the center. Also they were often children of kidnapped white women. For these reasons, he argues, frontier mixed bloods were assimilated in the Indian group much more frequently than mestizos in the urban areas. See Echaiz, René León, Interpretation historica del huaso chileno (Santiago: Editorial Universitaria, 1955), pp. 1920.Google Scholar

25 Mörner, , Race Mixture, p. 89Google Scholar; Damas, Germán Carrera, Boves—Aspectos socioeconómicos de la Guerra de Independencia (Caracas: Ediciones de la Biblioteca de la Universidad Central de Venezuela, 1972), pp. 29ff.Google Scholar

26 For example, in a report of Don Alfonso Carrio de la Bandera, Visitador de Postas y Correos de Su Majestad, quoted at length in Assunçao, , op. cit., pp. 173–74Google Scholar. The term ‘barbarian’ was current as a designation for intractable Indians who had to be defeated or settled. The indio kdrbaro (as opposed to the indio de razori) was a moral category that could be drawn on to describe the cowboy, just as the English stereotype of the Irish laborer—or of laborers generally—provided a model for the assignment of negative traits to blacks in the forging of U.S. racism (Genovese, Eugene D., Roll, Jordan, Roll. The World the Slaves Made, (New York: Random House, 1976), pp. 298–99.Google Scholar

27 As Joseph Love describes it, the Brazilian gaucho clearly distinguished himself from the three other races of humanity: the baianos (other Brazilians), the castelhanos (Spanishspeakers), and the gringos (other foreigners). See Love, , op. cit., p. 12Google Scholar. Frontier cowboys all over Latin America felt that those who did not ride were beneath contempt–the ‘equestrian conception of the world’ as Gongora puts it. Poor as these people were, their disdain for the work of settled agriculturalists was so intense that attempts to develop the Argentine pampas for anything but stockraising in the mid-nineteenth century required paying enormous wages to Irish immigrant laborers; three weeks of such earnings permitted them to quit for sheep raising. Scobie, James R., Revolution on the Pampas: A Social history of Argentine Wheat, 1860–1910 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1964), p. 14.Google Scholar

28 See Halperin-Donghi, Tulio, The Aftermath of Revolution in Latin America (New York: Harper & Row, 1973), Ch. 3, esp. pp. 85ff.Google Scholar

29 The English translation of Civilizatión y Barbarie is available as Sarmiento, D. F., Life in the Argentine Republic in the Days of the Tyrants (New York: Collier, 1961)Google Scholar; Gilmore, Robert L., Caudillism and Militarism is Venezuela, 1810–1910 (Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1964), p. 82Google Scholar; Hahner, June E., Civilian-Military Relations in Brazil, 1889–1898 (Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1969), pp. 141–42Google Scholar; Pàez, José Antonio, Autobiografia (New York: H.R. Elliot, 1946), I, 5, 7.Google Scholar

30 Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit., 317–22.Google Scholar

31 Thus even the liberal enemies of Rosas participated in elaborating, ironically, a partial legitimation of his repressive rule. The liberal Argentine Sarmiento argued with disgust (whose force derives from the admiration with which it is mingled) that the strange savages of the interior had overwhelmed the European cosmopolites and produce monsters like Facundo and Rosas. The conservative Venezuelan Vallenilla Lanz differed only in approving the tyranny he regards, with Sarmiento, as founded on the barbarians. Both men, incidentally, saw only the ways in which the physical environment shaped the cowboy; both missed the significance of the forms of exclusion practiced by the urban centers and are utterly unconscious of their own contributions to the image of the barbarian.

32 Chevalier, , op. cil., p. 115.Google Scholar

33 Molas, Rodriguez, p. 80.Google Scholar

34 Halperin-Donghi indeed makes the opposite claim from that of Chevalier, namely that extensive cattle raising needed little capital investment. See The Aftermath, pp. 60, 6769. He argues that in the political chaos of the Independence period cattle could expand in Venezuela and Buenos Aires province precisely for this reason, while mining languished in other parts of the New World. We would add that protection costs were very likely lower for the cattle business, since cowboys could substitute for police as suppliers of needed violence.Google Scholar

35 Chevalier, , op. cit., pp. 108–09, 120ff.Google Scholar

36 Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit., pp. 22, 61.Google Scholar

37 For examples of expedients used to build large herds and properties see for instance Chevalier, , op. cit., pp. 270ff.Google Scholar; Rodriguez, Molas, op. cit., p.75Google Scholar; Caravaglia, Juan Carlos, ‘Las actividades agropecuarias en el marco de la vida economica del Pueblo de Indios de Nuestra Senora de los Santos Reyes Magos de Yapeyu: 1768–1806,’ in Florescano, Enrique, ed., Haciendas, latifundios y plantaciones en America Latina (Mexico: Siglo XXI, 1975), pp. 464–85.Google Scholar

38 Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit., pp. 173–74.Google Scholar

39 Some of the largest landowners did control illegal commerce; see Caravaglia, , op. cit., p. 481. This was hardly true of all of them.Google Scholar

40 Caravaglia shows that Indians frequently deserted the strictly organized missionary settlements, attracted by the high wages paid in the vaquerias and, presumably, by the life style of the gauchos, (op. cit., p. 474.)Google Scholar

41 Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit., pp. 273, 362Google Scholar. For the role of military recruitment in post-independence Venezuela see Gilmore, , op. cit., pp. 3637.Google Scholar

42 Rodriguez, Molasop. cit., pp. 456–57.Google Scholar

43 This was, of course, a general characteristic of rural agricultural enterprises in Latin America. See Mörner, Magnus, ‘La hacienda hispanoamericana; examen de las investigaciones y debates recientes,’ in Florescano, Enrique, ed., Haciendas, latifundios, pp. 1548, esp. p. 23.Google Scholar

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45 See Gilmore, , op. cit., ch. 7, esp. p. 137Google Scholar; Damas, Carrera, op. cit., pp. 201ffGoogle Scholar; Lanz, Laureano Vallenilla, Cesarismo Democrdtico-estudio sobre las bases sociologicas de la constitution effectiva de Venezuela (Caracas: Tipografia Garrido, 1952), pp. 112–13.Google Scholar

46 Chevalier, , op. cit., pp. 363ffGoogle Scholar; Mörner, , ‘La hacienda,’ pp. 3233.Google Scholar

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49 Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit., pp. 273, 400–1. The relatively inefficient protection afforded by landowners to settled workers, paradoxically, fitted well into the coercive system that attached labor to land. Total efficiency would have been counter productive, since cowboys would have grown confident enough to press wage and other demands upon the cattle raisers. Even though the landowners sometimes resented the conscription raids of the regular forces, such raids helped them to keep the climate of terror that ensured total control over labor: only a worker's submission would move a landowner to attempt to rescue him in the case of forced conscription. Cattle raisers profited from their protection failures.Google Scholar

50 Lacking a better word, we have been employing the term ‘nomad’ in a loose fashion and not in a technical sense. To what extent frontier populations in Latin America really resembled nomadic societies is an important issue, especially in view of various comparisons found in the literature from Sarmiento onwards. Unfortunately, we cannot settle the question. Gauchos and llaneros did not consititute tribes, nor did their migrations follow any consistent geographical cycle. These, among others, are characteristics of nomadic societies as described by anthropologists; see for instance Bacon, Elizabeth E., ‘Types of Pastoral Nomadism in Central and Southwest Asia,’ Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 10 (1954), 4468CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Manoelito de Ornellas argues the essential similarity of gauchos and nomads in Gaúchos e beduinos (A origem etnica e aformacdo social do Rio Grande do Sul) (Rio de Janeiro: Livraria Jose Olympio Editora, 1956)Google Scholar. See also Coni, , El Gaucho, pp. 177–78.Google Scholar

51 Góngora, , Vagabundaje, pp. 2728.Google Scholar

52 Chevalier, , op. cit., pp. 142–43.Google Scholar

53 Assunçao, , op. cit., also observes the existence of a continuity between vagrant and settled populations in the area which today is Uruguay; see pp. 14, 161.Google Scholar

54 Assunçao, , op. cit., proposes that gauchos followed patterned careers. Vagrants and adventurers during their youth, they would settle down in later phases of their lives. See pp. 189–90.Google Scholar

55 See Sarmiento's descriptions of the rastreador and the baqueano, op. cit., 4449.Google Scholar

56 General Páez, in his charmingly narcissistic account of his youth, credits the harsh privations of estancia life for his later successful career as caudillo. ‘This was the school where I acquired the athletic robustness that often was so extremely useful to me later on. My body, from blows received, turned into iron’ (op. cit., p. 8.Google Scholar) On the robustness of llaneros and the misfortunes of the Spanish army in the Venezuelan savanna, see Lanz, Vallenilla, Cesarismo. pp. 13ff.Google Scholar

57 We follow here a suggestion of Wolf, Eric, Peasant Wars of the Twentieth Century (New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1969), p. 29Google Scholar. Note that the leader of the greatest peasant uprising in twentieth-century America, Latin, Zapata, Emiliano, did not dress like a Zapatista—like a peasant of the Mexican south—but like a charro (which he had been).Google Scholar

58 Assunçao, , op. cit., 212–14Google Scholar. Halperin-Donghi, Tulio, Politics, Economy and Society in Argentina in the Revolutionary Period (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1975), p. 278. Notice that ‘recruitment’ could have multiple meanings. Governments were eager to enter into agreement with captains of war that they could not control; men like Jose Artigas could therefore move from the leadership of a band of smugglers to a captaincy in the Blandengues. Recruitment could also mean forced conscription.Google Scholar

59 Góngora, , op. cit., pp. 2527Google Scholar; de Laytano, Dante, Fazenda de Criacdo de Gado (Porto Alegre: Oficinas Graficas da Imprensa Oficial, 1950), p. 23.Google Scholar

60 Forbes, Jack D., Apache, Navaho and Spaniard (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1960)Google Scholar; Powell, Philip Wayne, Soldiers, Indians and Silver (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1952)Google Scholar and Spanish Warfare Against the Chichimecas in the 1570sHispanic American Historical Review 24 (1944) 580604CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jones, Oakah L., ‘Pueblo Indian Auxiliaries in New Mexico, 1763–1821New Mexico Historical Review 37 (1962) 81109Google Scholar; Góngora, , op. cit.Google Scholar, Assunçao, , op. cit.Google Scholar; Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit.Google Scholar; de Armond, Louis, op. cit.Google Scholar

61 One Spanish official favored giving the Indians guns on the grounds that a mounted archer was as good a warrior as existed; the guns might at least make them dependent on the Spanish. See Moorehead, Max L., The Apache Frontier. Jacobo Ugarte and Spanish-Indian Relations in Northern New Spain, 1769–1791 (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1968), pp. 127–28Google Scholar. As for equestrian skills, it has been claimed that Indians improved on the techniques received from the Europeans. See Lago, Tomás, El Huaso (Santiago: Editorial Universitaria, S.A., 1953), pp. 5662.Google Scholar

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63 While the frontier culture was neither aboriginal to America nor dominant in Iberia, it is hard to assess the extent to which the Latin American frontier culture may have been a transplant of an Iberian cattle-raising culture similarly developed on the Christian-Moslem frontier. See Bishko, Charles Julian, ‘The Peninsular Background of Latin American Cattle Ranching,’ Hispanic American Historical Review 32 (1952), 491515CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and ‘The Castillian as Plainsman: The Medieval Ranching Frontier in La Mancha and Extremadura,’ in Lewis, Archibald R. and McGann, Thomas F., eds., The New World Looks at Its History (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1967), pp. 4769Google Scholar. At least one pioneer in bringing cattle to sixteenth-century Venezuela had been a rancher in Spain (De Armas, , op. cit., p. 33). No doubt there are other continuities of personnel, but the scale of New World ranching is without Iberian parallel.Google Scholar

64 Chevalier, , op. cit., pp. 105ff.Google Scholar

65 Thompson, E. P., ‘The Moral Economy of the English Crowd in the Eighteenth Century,‘ Past and Present 50 (1971), 71136CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Assunçao, , op. cit., pp. 144246Google Scholar; Ornellas, , op. cit., p. 141Google Scholar, Coni, , Vaquerias, pp. 11, 17Google Scholar; Cordova-Bello, Eleazar, ‘Aspectos historicos de la ganaderia en el Oriente Venezolano y Guayana,’ Revista de Historia 3, (1962), 71.Google Scholar

66 The conflicting attempts of a local governor and of the far more distant royal authorities to regulate the ranching industry in eighteenth-century Texas was undermined by the resistance not only of Indians, rustlers, and frontier soldiers but mission fathers and ranchers as well (Faulk, , op. cit.).Google Scholar

67 Góngora, , op. cit., p. 19Google Scholar. Coni observes that warnings of friends frequently allowed gaucho outlaws to elude capture. El Gaucho, p. 177.Google Scholar

68 Góngora, , op. cit., pp. 3537Google Scholar; Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit., pp. 465–66.Google Scholar

69 Eric Hobsbawm deserves credit for vividly demonstrating the interest of bandits, although his work is weakened by a lack of interest in distinguishing the origins, nature, and consequences of banditry from those of the myth of banditry. See his Bandits (New York: Dell, 1969)Google Scholar and Primitive Rebels (New York: Norton, 1959).Google Scholar

70 An example of the ease with which one could switch sides is given in Sarmiento's stunning portrait of Uruguay's Rivera: ‘General Rivera began his study of the grounds in 1804, when making war upon the government as an outlaw; afterwards, he waged war upon the outlaws as a government officer; next upon the king as a patriot; and later, upon the patriots as a peasant; upon the Argentines as a Brazilian chieftain; and upon Lavalleja as President; upon President Oribe as a proscribed chieftain; and, finally, upon Rosas, the ally of Oribe, as a general of Uruguay; in all of which positions he has had an abundance of time to learn something of the art of the Baqueano [pathfinder].’ Sarmiento, , op. cit., p. 49.Google Scholar

71 It was a custom of families on the Brazilian-Uruguayan border to make their sons citizens of both countries to protect them from the consequences of defeat in revolutionary warfare. Double nationality could evidently be used to escape the consequences of common crimes. See Garcia, Nepomuceno Saravia, Memorias de Aparicio Saravia (Montevideo: Editorial Medina, 1956), p. 18.Google Scholar

72 Martin Güemes, a major Argentine chief, tried to use a land-reform program to build support among gauchos linked to other power brokers in Salta province, but it appears no one was interested. This left him dependent on the local elites (Haigh, Roger M., Martin Güemes: Tyrant or Tool ? A Study of the Sources of Power of an Argentine Caudillo (Fort Worth: Texas Christian University Press, 1968), pp. 4349Google Scholar). For Venezuela see Damas, Carrera, op. cit., pp. 198200Google Scholar, and for a probable instance from colonial Argentina see Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit., p. 78Google Scholar. The Villista movement in the Mexican revolution, in spite of the moral influence of the Zapatistas, was not concerned with land reform in the usual sense. Rather, as Friedrich Katz has shown, the Villista land program was organized almost completely to pay off Villa's soldiers–not to mention his generals. Katz, Friedrich, ‘Agrarian Changes in Northern Mexico in the Period of Villista Rule, 1913–1915.’Google Scholar Paper presented at the Fourth International Congress of Mexican Studies, 1973. On the drastic differences of Zapatista and Villista delegates at the Aguascalientes Convention see Quirk, Robert E., The Mexican Revolution, 1914–1915 (New York: Norton, 1970), p. 213.Google Scholar

73 This analysis of the mobilization of cowboys seems not to apply to the contemporary world. The spread of class and party politics has probably affected cowboys as much as other sectors of the rural population, as demonstrated by the integration of Colombian llaneros in a movement of a socialist bent during the 1950s. See Campos, Germán Guzmán, Borda, Orlando Fals and Luna, Eduardo Umana, La Violencia en Colombia (Bogota: Ediciones Tercer Mundo, 19621964), esp. Vol. II, 55151. The contemporary llaneros, like all the rest of us, find lawyers to help draft political position papers.Google Scholar

74 The pulpero was in some cases the overseer (capalaz) of a ranch and in others the rancher himself. See Assunçao, , op. cit., p. 203Google Scholar. On entrepreneurs who sponsored large-scale vaquerias with legal authorization see Coni, , El Gaucho, p. 63Google Scholar; and Historia de las vaquerias, pp. 5052.Google Scholar

75 Caravaglia, , op. cit., pp. 481–83Google Scholar, For further evidence on the process of ‘contracting and sub-contracting’ in frontier regions see Coni, , p. 178.Google Scholar

76 Assunçao, op. cit., pp. 146–51.Google Scholar

77 We are talking about those eslancieros who lived in cities and were powerful officers or merchants. The small proprietor could well be a pulpero or smuggling chief himself.

78 Assunçao remarks that the smuggling chief and the military leader were often the same person. The wars of independence and the era of caudillismo propelled bands of smugglers into adopting violence as their way of life and means of subsistence–especially since the turmoil seriously disrupted the cattle business. Another reason was the growing rationalization of whatever estancias were still operating, which tended to make cattle hunting obsolete (op. cit., pp. 207, 212Google Scholar). Military leaders were also contrabandists (as in the case of Boves); in many cases they had been overseers of cattle ranches, or pulperos. See Coni, , op. cit., p. 175Google Scholar; Lanz, Vallenilla, Cesarismo, pp. 7679.Google Scholar

79 Góngora, , op. cit., p. 22.Google Scholar

80 Damas, Carrera, op. cit., pp. 182, 184–85, 193202Google Scholar. Vallenilla Lanz observes that Boves and Paez, the two greatest caudillos of the independence period, had been in trouble with the colonial justice due to their illegal activities. See his Disgregacion e integration. Ensayo sobre la formation de la nacionalidad venezolana (Caracas: Tip. Universal, 1930), Vol. 1, 188, fn. 2.Google Scholar

81 Garcia, Saravia, op. cit., pp. 472, 483–84.Google Scholar

82 In their fine article on caudillismo, Wolf and Hansen emphasize the pervasiveness of pillage as a means of acquiring wealth but fail to emphasize that the selling of protection was as important an activity as direct pillage for Latin American caudillos. The successful caudillo had the business acumen to realize the possibilities of this form of exploitation of violence, as becomes clear in the impressive list of their entrepreneurial qualities compiled by Wolf and Hansen. Wolf, Eric R. and Hansen, Edward C., ‘Caudillo politics: A Structural Analysis,’ Comparative Studies in Society and History 9 (1967) 168–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

83 One might add that the armies of many chieftains started as small frontier bands that generally evolved into forces controlling nationwide extensions (Mjr) Góngora, , op. cit., p. 36Google Scholar). Mörner proposes investigating the question of whether military power precedes ownership of great estates or vice-versa for all types of rural enterprise in Latin America. ‘La Hacienda Hispanoamericana,’ p. 25.Google Scholar

84 Damas, Carrera, op. cit., pp. 201 ff.Google Scholar, singles out the anti-vagrancy laws and the attempts of hacendados to appropriate the vast Venezuelan fields as the major reason why llaneros initially sided with royalists in the Independence War. Similarly, Góngora points out how a mentality of resistance to state authority—particularly to military service—fed continuous guerrilla warfare in Chile in the early 1800s. Vagabundaje, , op. cit., pp. 3436.Google Scholar

85 Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit., pp. 465 ff.Google Scholar

86 Franco, Costa, op. cit., p. 203.Google Scholar

87 Fewer cowboys were necessary because a major task was no longer needed: keeping the animals within the boundaries of unfenced properties.

88 Chevalier, , op. cit., pp. 25, 27, 401.Google Scholar

89 Molas, Rodriguez, op. cit., pp. 107–68Google Scholar. On the Spanish fondness for dangerous displays of riding skills see Lago, Tomás, op. cit., pp. 72, 124.Google Scholar

90 The following conception of play and of violence as a playful activity is based on Huizinga, J., Homo Ludens: A study of the play element in culture (Boston: Beacon Press, 1955), esp. ch. 1.Google Scholar

91 Religion was also a universal component—all could, or rather should, be Catholic. But being Catholic did not bring social honor to anybody, while excelling in the arts of war did.

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94 Impressive evidence of this fact is given by the gaucho version of the duel with knives. The goal in such a duel was not to kill the opponent, but to mark him. In looking at his face the loser would have to acknowledge for the rest of his life the courage and skill of the winner. He would literally be a captive audience. See Sarmiento, , op. cit., p. 64. Death in these duels was described as ‘a misfortune.’Google Scholar

95 For documentation of such occurrences see Aragón, Alfredo, El desarme del ejercito federal por la revolution de 1913 (Paris: Imprimeries Wallhoff et Roche, 1915), p. 68Google Scholar; Assunçao, , op. cit., p. 197Google Scholar; Ornellas, , op. cit., p. 124.Google Scholar

96 For instance, Franco, Costa, op. cit., p. 207.Google Scholar

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99 Obviously, the pulperos had also other methods to force debts upon peons. See Molas, Rodriguezguez, op. cit., p. 236.Google Scholar

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109 Rama, Carlos M., ‘The Passing of the Afro-Uruguayans from Caste Society into Class Society,’ in Morner, Magnus, ed., Race and Class in Latin America (New York: Columbia University Press, 1970), pp. 2850, esp. p. 32Google Scholar. Halperin-Donghi, , ‘La expansión,’ p. 101.Google Scholar

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