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Elusive Unity
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15 November 2014

The rural inhabitants of this region have had some of their most important dealings with their nation’s government as self-identified “peasants” and “Maya.” Using ethnography, oral history, and archival research, Armstrong-Fumero shows how the same body of narrative tropes has defined the local experience of twentieth-century agrarianism and twenty-first-century multiculturalism.
Through these recycled narratives, contemporary multicultural politics have also inherited some ambiguities that were built into its agrarian predecessor. Specifically, local experiences of peasant and indigenous politics are shaped by tensions between the vernacular language of identity and the intense factionalism that often defines the social organization of rural communities. This significant contribution will be of interest to historians, anthropologists, and political scientists studying Latin America and the Maya.
—June Nash, City University of New York
— P. R. Sullivan, Choice
—Juliet S. Erazo, Political and Legal Anthropology Review Online
"Armstrong-Fumero’s ethnography is an important, welcome addition to the work of other anthropologists and ethnographers such as Quetzil Castaneda, Juan Castillo Cocom, Shannan Mattiace, and Wolfgang Gabbert, whose ground-breaking work on Yucatan and Yucatec Maya communities challenges and complicates how academics think about indigenous actors and construct their fields of study. While Elusive Unity may be seen as aimed at specialists, its engagement with indigenous terms of identity and its grounding in Yucatec Maya material realities cuts across disciplines and should prove valuable to a wide range of readers concerned with indigeneity, identity politics, and community formation."
—Paul M. Worley, Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology
—Ben Fallaw, Journal of Peasant Studies