Earlier this year the Arcadia portal published our work "Water flows an topographic networks of power: Social struggles for water in the Copiapo valley in the eighteenth century".
With this work we set out on the one hand to rethink historical processes linked to politics, water and territory during the late colonial period in the Copiapó valley, as well as to propose outlines of a theory of regional configuration processes that considers both the connecting flows, places and a wide series of human and non-human actants, as well as highlighting the relevance of incorporating the topographical dimension, both as a positive fact in the study of the territory, and also as a political metaphor.
On the other hand, the work tries to describe and analyze the social conflicts around water during the period, in which the physical topography was correlated to a series of power topographies based on the structure of political and economic asymmetries between the different classes. and estates in the valley.
Links:
With this work we set out on the one hand to rethink historical processes linked to politics, water and territory during the late colonial period in the Copiapó valley, as well as to propose outlines of a theory of regional configuration processes that considers both the connecting flows, places and a wide series of human and non-human actants, as well as highlighting the relevance of incorporating the topographical dimension, both as a positive fact in the study of the territory, and also as a political metaphor.
On the other hand, the work tries to describe and analyze the social conflicts around water during the period, in which the physical topography was correlated to a series of power topographies based on the structure of political and economic asymmetries between the different classes. and estates in the valley.
Links:
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