Contemporary Latin American Inequality: Class Struggle, Decolonization, and the Limits of Liberal Citizenship

Weberian sociological approaches dominate the contemporary study of inequality in Latin America. Theoretically, the major works in the area suffer from a conflation of liberalism and democracy and offer flawed conceptions of capitalism, class, and other social relations of oppression. This article o...

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Main Author: Jeffery R. Webber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Latin American Studies Association 2017-08-01
Series:Latin American Research Review
Online Access:https://larrlasa.org/articles/34
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spelling doaj-9032d15bb1f7430ab2d99facd8a9767f2020-11-25T02:17:27ZengLatin American Studies AssociationLatin American Research Review0023-87911542-42782017-08-0152228129910.25222/larr.3421Contemporary Latin American Inequality: Class Struggle, Decolonization, and the Limits of Liberal CitizenshipJeffery R. Webber0School of Politics and International Relations, Queen Mary University of LondonWeberian sociological approaches dominate the contemporary study of inequality in Latin America. Theoretically, the major works in the area suffer from a conflation of liberalism and democracy and offer flawed conceptions of capitalism, class, and other social relations of oppression. This article offers an exegesis and critique of several recent influential texts written within the Weberian tradition. It then proposes as an alternative a Marxian-decolonial theoretical framework for understanding inequality and the totalizing power of capital. It demonstrates how such a framework can better account for the complexity of class relations and other internally related forms of social oppression—such as gender, sexuality, and race—in Latin America today. Finally, the article shows the utility of the Marxist-decolonial framework by way, first, of a concrete investigation into the highly contested dynamics of twenty-first-century extractive capitalism in the region, and, second, through an exposition of the life story and activism of Luis Macas, an indigenous activist and intellectual in Ecuador. The core element of Macas’s political subjectivity is an underlying utopian-revolutionary dialectic through which he draws on elements of a precapitalist past in looking forward to an anticolonial and socialist future.https://larrlasa.org/articles/34
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeffery R. Webber
spellingShingle Jeffery R. Webber
Contemporary Latin American Inequality: Class Struggle, Decolonization, and the Limits of Liberal Citizenship
Latin American Research Review
author_facet Jeffery R. Webber
author_sort Jeffery R. Webber
title Contemporary Latin American Inequality: Class Struggle, Decolonization, and the Limits of Liberal Citizenship
title_short Contemporary Latin American Inequality: Class Struggle, Decolonization, and the Limits of Liberal Citizenship
title_full Contemporary Latin American Inequality: Class Struggle, Decolonization, and the Limits of Liberal Citizenship
title_fullStr Contemporary Latin American Inequality: Class Struggle, Decolonization, and the Limits of Liberal Citizenship
title_full_unstemmed Contemporary Latin American Inequality: Class Struggle, Decolonization, and the Limits of Liberal Citizenship
title_sort contemporary latin american inequality: class struggle, decolonization, and the limits of liberal citizenship
publisher Latin American Studies Association
series Latin American Research Review
issn 0023-8791
1542-4278
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Weberian sociological approaches dominate the contemporary study of inequality in Latin America. Theoretically, the major works in the area suffer from a conflation of liberalism and democracy and offer flawed conceptions of capitalism, class, and other social relations of oppression. This article offers an exegesis and critique of several recent influential texts written within the Weberian tradition. It then proposes as an alternative a Marxian-decolonial theoretical framework for understanding inequality and the totalizing power of capital. It demonstrates how such a framework can better account for the complexity of class relations and other internally related forms of social oppression—such as gender, sexuality, and race—in Latin America today. Finally, the article shows the utility of the Marxist-decolonial framework by way, first, of a concrete investigation into the highly contested dynamics of twenty-first-century extractive capitalism in the region, and, second, through an exposition of the life story and activism of Luis Macas, an indigenous activist and intellectual in Ecuador. The core element of Macas’s political subjectivity is an underlying utopian-revolutionary dialectic through which he draws on elements of a precapitalist past in looking forward to an anticolonial and socialist future.
url https://larrlasa.org/articles/34
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