Our Landless Patria

`

Our Landless Patria

Marginal Citizenship and Race in Caguas, Puerto Rico, 1880-1910

Rosa E. Carrasquillo

208 pages

Paperback

December 2008

978-0-8032-2070-6

$19.95 Add to Cart

About the Book

Our Landless Patria examines issues of race and citizenship in Puerto Rico, tracing how the process of land privatization accelerated a series of struggles for natural resources between the poorest sectors of society and the landed elite. The laws of privatization favored the landed elite and barred former slaves and their descendants from obtaining a formal title to a piece of land. In response, people of color developed an alternative citizenship that validated their livelihood, putting in motion a series of civil claims that protected people’s mobility rights and their access to land. However, the rural poor’s claims for a more egalitarian society, or what Rosa E. Carrasquillo calls “marginal citizenship,” could not successfully transform the political exclusion of the racially mixed population because of its heavy borrowing from the Spanish legal system. In particular, marginal citizenship adopted patriarchy as a model to regulate social relations at home, failing to address gender inequalities and perpetuating class differences.

Our Landless Patria deciphers the late nineteenth-century structure of power in the Spanish colonial state at the local level and illuminates the way ordinary people experienced day-to-day relations of power. Carrasquillo's analysis makes a strong case that the poorest sector of rural society provided the fertile ground in which a civic consciousness developed.

Author Bio

Rosa E. Carrasquillo is an assistant professor of Latin American and Caribbean history at Assumption College in Worcester, Massachusetts.

Praise

“An important addition to Puerto Rico’s agrarian and labour history.”—European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies

“The book is certainly a welcome contribution to Puerto Rican social history and gives interesting insights into the transition period of the late nineteenth century.”—American Historical Review