Hispanisms and Whiteness in Conservative Andean Public History
Date
2025Author
Bedoya Hidalgo, María Elena <Honorary
Research Associate, Department of Arts, The University of Manchester,
Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK>
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This article examines the construction of conservative public histories in the Andean countries, exploring
their continuities and transformations into the 21st century.
Rather than viewing history solely as discourse, I approach it
as a series of commemorative and communicative practices
that project racialized imaginaries publicly. From this
perspective, I analyze how conservative public history,
linked to Hispanist ideologies, shaped ideas of racial hierarchy both nationally and transatlantically. Particular
attention is given to the alleged historical objectivity claimed
by neo-Hispanist discourse, its strategic connection to mestizaje as a whitening ideology, the diplomatic use of historical narratives, and contemporary expressions of whiteness
through Hispanist rhetoric in media. My aim is to illuminate
these critical intersections, opening a broader debate on
racialization within the field of public history.
