Indians, Merchants, and Markets Trade and Repartimiento Production of Cochineal Dye in Late Colonial Oaxaca, 1750-1821
- List Price: $80.00
- Binding: Hardcover
- Publisher: Stanford Univ Pr
- Publish date: 11/01/2000
Examining repartimiento production of cochineal, a dyestuff produced exclusively by Oaxacan Indians and representing Mexico's most valued export after silver, this study shows that Indians produced cochineal for the market voluntarily because it provided them with needed income. The primary role of the repartimiento was to provide Mexico's indigenous peasantry with credit, without which they could not have participated in the market as extensively as they did. Owing to the difficulty of collecting debts, credit provision was monopolized by agents of the Crown, the alcaldes mayores, who alone possessed the legal leverage needed to enforce the payment of debts. Though Spanish officials profited from the repartimiento, their economic gains were not so great as traditionally believed.
Overall, the book demonstrates that Mexican Indians were much more actively engaged in the market than customarily imagined, and were adept at promoting their interests despite the discriminating policies of colonialism. The book rounds out itsaccount of the repartimiento by examining the transatlantic trade in cochineal, especially in its late colonial decline.
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