Peace Corps Fantasies
How Development Shaped the Global Sixties
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Word Count
80,000 words, Guess
Page Count
320 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL27730777M
- ISBN-139780816692217
- ISBN-100816692211
- OCLC Control Number898092829
- Library of Congress Control Number2014047960
and 1 more
- Amazon0816692211
Classifications
- LCCHC60.5.G45 2015
- LCCHC60.5 .G45 2015
Description
"To tens of thousands of volunteers in its first decade, the Peace Corps was "the toughest job you’ll ever love." In the United States' popular imagination to this day, it is a symbol of selfless altruism and the most successful program of John F. Kennedy's presidency. But in her provocative new cultural history of the 1960s Peace Corps, Molly Geidel argues that the agency's representative development ventures also legitimated the violent exercise of American power around the world and the destruction of indigenous ways of life. In the 1960s, the practice of development work, embodied by iconic Peace Corps volunteers, allowed U.S. policy makers to manage global inequality while assuaging their own gendered anxieties about postwar affluence. Geidel traces how modernization theorists used the Peace Corps to craft the archetype of the heroic development worker: a ruggedly masculine figure who would inspire individuals and communities to abandon traditional lifestyles and seek integration into the global capitalist system. Drawing on original archival and ethnographic research, Geidel analyzes how Peace Corps volunteers struggled to apply these ideals. The book focuses on the case of Bolivia, where indigenous nationalist movements dramatically expelled the Peace Corps in 1971. She also shows how Peace Corps development ideology shaped domestic and transnational social protest, including U.S. civil rights, black nationalist, and antiwar movements." -- Publisher's description
Subjects
Series Statement
- Critical American Studies
Other Editions
- Peace Corps Fantasies: How Development Shaped the Global Sixties
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