Circulación e incorporación en la frontera: Trayectorias indígenas tras la “Conquista del desierto”

This article will approach the policies of progress on the indigenous territory by the Argentine, during its consolidation as nation state, focusing on the submission, deportation, confinement and processes of subordinate incorporation of indigenous peoples of the "last frontier" of Buenos...

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Autor principal: Mariano Nagy
Formato: article
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Publicado: Centre de Recherches sur les Mondes Américains 2012
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/b0e32421475b4806a93ea88e1f717b12
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Sumario:This article will approach the policies of progress on the indigenous territory by the Argentine, during its consolidation as nation state, focusing on the submission, deportation, confinement and processes of subordinate incorporation of indigenous peoples of the "last frontier" of Buenos Aires. This refers to the boundary plotted by the War Minister Adolfo Alsina, partly drawn from 1876 under the presidency of Nicolás Avellaneda, and which has been designated as the "ultimate limit" with indigenous societies and the step immediately prior to the final submission which would involve the "Conquest of the Desert". The objective is to retell the stages of the military campaign and its consequences, but by throwing light on its impact on the indigenous communities so that we can recover events that have become "non-events". We are going to develop and analyze the indigenous trails in the present west of Buenos Aires, with special emphasis on the Trenque Lauquen, command which turned into a city, where indigenous families have settled down, mostly linked to the cacique Pincén's  people.