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About this book
Mendoza draws on early-twentieth-century newspapers and other archival documents as well as interviews with key artistic and intellectual figures and their descendants. She offers vivid descriptions of the Peruvian Mission of Incaic Art, a tour undertaken by a group of artists from Cuzco, at their own expense, to represent Peru to Bolivia, Argentina, and Uruguay in 1923ā24, as well as of the origins in the 1920s of the Qosqo Center of Native Art, the first cultural institution dedicated to regional and national folkloric art. She highlights other landmarks, including both The Charango Hour, a radio show that contributed to the broad acceptance of rural Andean music from its debut in 1937, and the rise in that same year of another major cultural institution, the American Art Institute of Cuzco. Throughout, she emphasizes the intricate local, regional, national, and international pressures that combined to produce folkloric art, especially the growing importance of national and international tourism in Cuzco.
Please visit the Web site http://nas.ucdavis.edu/creatingbook for samples of the images and music discussed in this book.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface to the English Edition
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Revisiting Indigenismo and Folklore
- Chapter 1. The Misión Peruana de Arte Incaico and the Development of Artistic-Folkloric Production in Cuzco
- Chapter 2. The Rise of Cultural Institutions and Contests
- Chapter 3. Touristic Cuzco, Its Monuments, and Its Folklore
- Chapter 4. La Hora del Charango: The Cholo Feeling, CuzqueƱoness, and Peruvianness
- Chapter 5. Creative Effervescence and the Consolidation of Spaces for āāFolkloreāā
- Epilogue: Who Will Represent What Is Our Own? Some Paradoxes of Andean Folklore Both Inside and Outside Peru
- Notes
- Discography
- Bibliography
- Index