Taxing Difference in Peru and New Spain 16th-19th Century. Negotiating Social Differences and Belonging

Albiez-Wieck, Sarah

Book (monograph)

Abstract

This book addresses the negotiation of categorizations in colonial societies in Spanish America from a new vantage point: fiscality. In early modern empires (poll) taxes were a significant factor to organize and perpetuate social inequalities. By this, fiscal categorizations had very concrete effects on the daily life of the categorized, on their assets and on their labor force. They intersected with social categorizations such as gender, profession, age and what many authors have termed race or ethnicity, but which are denominated here, more accurately with a term from the sources, calidad. They were imposed by legislation from above and contested via petitions from below, the latter being a type of source scarcely analyzed until now--

Details about the publication

PublisherBrill
Place of publicationLeiden and Boston
Title of seriesEuropean expansion and indigenous response (ISSN: 1873-8974)
Volume of series40
StatusPublished
Release year2022
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
ISBN978-90-04-52164-3
Link to the full texthttps://brill.com/view/title/34680?language=en
KeywordsAmerican Studies; Early Modern History, Economic history, History, Social history, Latin America

Authors from the University of Münster

Albiez-Wieck, Sarah
Professorship of Modern and Contemporary History with special emphasis on Latin America (Prof. Dr. Albiez- Wieck)
Cluster of Excellence "Religion and Politics"