Introduction: Interrogating the common ground -- Writing, affect, and the portraiture of power -- Graffiti, public opinion, and the poetics of politics -- Visual culture and the limits of representation -- The machine in the pampa, or writing as technology
Summary
Beyond Civilization and Barbarism examines the role of cultural production in the struggle for power in Argentina during the first half of the nineteenth century. Identifying the pueblo, or people, as the common preoccupation of those vying to legitimize competing political projects, it argues that this decisive period of Latin American history was marked by a fundamentally modern debate to define the constitutive parts of the nation