Michael F Brown & Eduardo Fernández
University of California Press
Paperback ed., 275 pages

Jacket Copy:War of Shadows is the haunting story of a failed uprising in the Peruvian Amazon—told largely by people who were there. Late in 1965, Asháninka Indigenous people, members of one of the Amazon’s largest native nations, joined forces with Marxist revolutionaries who had opened a guerrilla front in Asháninka territory. They fought, and were crushed by, the overwhelming military force of the Peruvian government. Why did some Ashánikas believe this alliance would deliver them from poverty and the depredations of colonization on their rainforest home?
The players in this dramatic confrontation included militants of the Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR), the U. S. Embassy, the Peruvian military, a “renegade” American settler, and the Asháninka people themselves. Using press reports and archival sources as well as oral histories, the authors weave a vivid tapestry of narratives and counternarratives that challenges the official history of the guerrilla struggle. Central to the story is the Asháninkas’ persistent hope that a messiah would lead them to freedom, a belief with roots in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century jungle rebellions and religious movements.
With rare insight and eloquence, anthropologists Brown and Fernández write about an Amazonian people whose contacts with outsiders have repeatedly begun in hope and ended in tragedy.
“For the Asháninka, engagement in this fight was but one episode in a long struggle for their own identity in a utopian world without evil. Brown and Fernández place that struggle in the larger continuum of utopian hopes and uprisings that have shaken the Amazon for centuries, but that have become ever more ferocious and poignant as ever larger number of outsiders invade the Amazonian world. The authors present us with the study of a single case, but one that not only has all the fascination of a mystery story exquisitely told but also addresses a universal human predicament of these terror-ridden times.”–Eric Wolf, for the dust jacket of the cloth edition.
“A highly readable narrative based on a most impressive variety of sources, ranging from obscure historical documents to interviews with many of those directly involved, from both sides of the conflict […] It provides an excellent example of how historical scholarship and an awareness of contemporary politics may be combined in a mutually reinforcing way with insights derived from intimate ethnographic enquiry.”–Paul Henley, Times Literary Supplement.
“The book has the flavor of a journey along jungle trails, where myth and mist cohabit the dense underbrush and make it hard to see down to the roots. The inevitable secrecy, fear, and danger of the present guerrilla war–both to authors and informants–only add to the excitement, and to the impossibility of ever knowing for sure.”–Florencia Mallon, American Historical Review.

2 responses to “War of Shadows: The Struggle for Utopia in the Peruvian amazon”
[…] new edition of Guerra de Sombras, the Spanish-language translation of War of Shadows: The Struggle for Utopia in the Peruvian Amazon (University of California Press), co-authored by Eduardo Fernández and Michael F. Brown, will be […]
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[…] by Hanne Veber that questioned arguments made in a book that I co-authored with Eduardo Fernández, War of Shadows. WoS traced messianic currents in Asháninka social movements and uprisings over a period of more […]
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