Peruvian Street Lives

ebook Culture, Power, and Economy among Market Women of Cuzco · Interp Culture New Millennium

By Linda J. Seligmann

cover image of Peruvian Street Lives

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For more than twenty years, Linda J. Seligmann walked the streets of Peru in city and countryside alike, talking to the women who work in the informal and open-air markets in Cuzco's Andean highlands. Her combination of ethnographic analysis, insightful and human vignettes, and superb photographs offers a humane yet incisive portrait of the women's lives against the backdrop of globalization and other powerful forces.

In Peruvian Street Lives, Seligmann argues that the sometimes invisible and informal economic, social, and political networks market women establish may appear disorderly and chaotic, but in fact often keep dysfunctional economies and corrupt bureaucracies from utterly destroying the ability of citizens to survive from day to day. Seligmann asks why the constructive efforts of market women to make a living provoke such negative social perceptions from some members of Peruvian society, who see them as symbols and actual catalysts of social disorder. At the same time, Seligmann shows how market women eke out a living, combat discrimination, and transgress racial and gender ideologies within the rich and expressive cultural traditions they have developed.

|Contents
Acknowledgements vii
Introduction 1
1. Market Spaces and Market Places 19
2. Dried Goods, Soup, and Fried Eggs: Exchange Relations 42
3. Bitter Salt: Household Structures and Gender Ideologies 54
4. Straw Hats: The World of Wholesalers 71
5.. Harpies and the Empty, Dirty, Overpriced Bread Basket: Regulating the Market Chain 87
6. Sharks: Loan and Credit Arrangements 104
7. Talking Brew, Butchering Patience: Conversations in the Marketplace 119
8. Race Recipes: Alliances and Animosity 148
9. Angels and Saints: Popular Religiosity 161
10. Two-Way Streets: Political Action 196
Conclusion: What's in Store? 223
References Cited 229
Index 237| Cited as one of two Leeds Honor Books for 2006 by the Society for Urban, National, and Transnational/Global Anthropology (SUNTA). — Society for Urban, National, and Transnational/Global Anthropology (SUNTA)
|Linda J. Seligmann is Professor Emerita of Anthropology at George Mason University. Her books include Broken Links, Enduring Ties: American Adoption across Race, Class, and Nation and Peruvian Street Lives: Culture, Power, and Economy among Market Women of Cuzco.
Peruvian Street Lives