After Servitude
About the Author
From Our Blog

UC Press November Award Winners

Award Winning UC Press Authors at AAA 2023

Racial Violence, Land, and Indigenous Reparation in Bolivia
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface
Introduction
Part One: Kinship
1 • Claiming Kinship
2 • Gifting Land
Part Two: Property
3 • Producing Property
4 • Grounding Indigeneity
Part Three: Exchange
5 • Demanding Return
6 • Reviving Exchange
Conclusion: Property’s Afterlives
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Reviews
"After Servitude invites us to pay closer attention to the ways people make claims on each other as they assert and rework the bonds of relatedness—as a means of repair, but not escape from the past."— Anthropological Quarterly
— PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review"In After Servitude justice is described as a historical continuum that may lead to redress if it is interpreted appropriately by the actors of the present. Justice is something that has to be socially enacted, secured from the other, sometimes by force."
— American Ethnologist"Through her deft interweaving of classical and contemporary social theory and the actions and words of her Bolivian interlocutors, Winchell creates a complex and sobering picture of the tangled and often contradictory valences of who lays claims to former hacienda land, how those claims are raised and resolved, and the extent to which land as property is intertwined with long-standing schemas of sociality and inequity in Bolivia’s central highlands."
"After Servitude speaks to the value of deep ethnographic spadework for understanding and assessing the complex challenges and limits of Bolivia’s ongoing experiment in postcolonial state-building."— Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"The conflictive histories of the hacienda era are not even past—descendants of tenant farmers today confront both the sequelae of servitude and the enduring presence of inequality. Winchell’s careful, clear-eyed attention to the layered significance of post-colonial property leads to unexpected revelations about kinship and race, land and labor, justice and accountability."—Jessaca B. Leinaweaver, author of The Circulation of Children: Kinship, Adoption, and Morality in Andean Peru
"After Servitude offers what the best ethnography provides: a richly contextualized case study of global phenomena. It rewards with careful reevaluations of property rights, political reform, and indigenous/colonial relations, revealing the surprising ways in which they interweave in the living histories of contemporary Bolivia. An exemplary piece of scholarship."––Justin Richland, author of Cooperation without Submission: Indigenous Jurisdictions in Native Nation-US Engagements
"In this rich ethnography, Winchell compellingly argues that relational legacies of servitude deeply impact the search for indigenous justice. Even in Bolivia, where decolonization is a central goal of the state, liberal tools like rights and property are insufficient to untangle enduring patterns of kinship, mutual dependencies, land ownership, and authority."—Nancy Postero, author of The Indigenous State: Race, Politics, and Performance in Plurinational Bolivia
Awards
- SLACA Annual Book Award Honorable Mention 2022, Society for Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology