Children of the Father King: Youth, Authority, and Legal Minority in Colonial Lima | 
enlarge | Author: Bianca Premo Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press Category: Book
Buy New: $24.95
New (10) Used (8) from $16.59
Sales Rank: 863243
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 368 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9 x 5.9 x 0.8
ISBN: 0807856193 Dewey Decimal Number: 305.23098509032 EAN: 9780807856192 ASIN: 0807856193
Publication Date: September 5, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description In a pioneering study of childhood in colonial Spanish America, Bianca Premo examines the lives of youths in the homes, schools, and institutions of the capital city of Lima, Peru. Situating these young lives within the framework of law and intellectual history from 1650 to 1820, Premo brings to light the colonial politics of childhood and challenges readers to view patriarchy as a system of power based on age, caste, and social class as much as gender. Although Spanish laws endowed elite men with an authority over children that mirrored and reinforced the monarch's legitimacy as a colonial "Father King," Premo finds that, in practice, Lima's young often grew up in the care of adults--such as women and slaves--who were subject to the patriarchal authority of others. During the Bourbon Reforms, city inhabitants of all castes and classes began to practice a "new politics of the child," challenging men and masters by employing Enlightenment principles of childhood. Thus the social transformations and political dislocations of the late eighteenth century occurred not only in elite circles and royal palaces, Premo concludes, but also in the humble households of a colonial city.
|
|
|