Table Of ContentANXIOUS CITIZENSHIP:  
 
INSECURITY, APOCALYPSE AND WAR MEMORIES IN PERU'S ANDES 
 
by 
 
Caroline Yezer 
 
Department of Cultural Anthropology 
Duke University 
 
 
Date:______________________ 
 
Approved: 
 
___________________________ 
Orin Starn, Supervisor 
 
___________________________ 
Anne Allison 
 
___________________________ 
Marisol De la Cadena 
 
___________________________ 
Ralph Litzinger 
 
___________________________ 
Diane Nelson 
 
___________________________ 
Charles Piot 
 
Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of  
the requirements for the degree of Doctor  
of Philosophy in the Department of  
Cultural Anthropology in the Graduate School  
of Duke University 
2007
ANXIOUS CITIZENSHIP:  
 
INSECURITY, APOCALYPSE AND WAR MEMORIES IN PERU'S ANDES 
 
by 
 
Caroline Yezer 
 
Department of Cultural Anthropology 
Duke University 
 
 
Date:______________________ 
 
Approved: 
 
___________________________ 
Orin Starn, Supervisor 
 
___________________________ 
Anne Allison 
 
___________________________ 
Marisol De la Cadena 
 
___________________________ 
Ralph Litzinger 
 
___________________________ 
Diane Nelson 
 
___________________________ 
Charles Piot 
 
An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of  
the requirements for the degree of Doctor  
of Philosophy in the Department of  
Cultural Anthropology in the Graduate School  
of Duke University 
2007
Copyright 
Caroline Yezer 
2007
ABSTRACT 
The war between the Peruvian state and the Maoist Shining Path rebels 
began in the Department of Ayacucho, an area with a majority of indigenous 
Quechua- speaking peasant villages.  After twenty years of violence (1980-2000), 
this region of South America’s Andes began a critical period of demilitarization, 
refugee resettlement, and reconciliation.  In this transition, the rebuilding of villages 
devastated by the war raises critical questions about indigenous autonomy, 
citizenship, and the role of international human rights initiatives in local 
reconciliation.  
I examine the tensions between interventions by national and transnational 
organizations, and the insecurities that continue to define everyday life in villages 
like Wiracocha - a newly resurrected community that was in the heart of the war 
zone.1 Based on eighteen months of fieldwork in this village and ten months of 
comparative fieldwork in villages across the Ayacucho region and in the city of 
Huamanga, my research shows that villagers were often at odds with the aid and 
interventions offered to them from the outside.  I focus on the complicated nature of 
village war history, paying attention to the initial sympathy with Shining Path and 
the village's later decision to join the counterinsurgency. In Ayacucho, memory has 
itself become a site of struggle that reveals as much about present-day conflict, 
ambivalences, and insecurities of neoliberal Peru as it does about the actual history 
                                                 
1 Wiracocha is a pseudonym that I am using in order to maintain subject 
confidentiality. 
  iv
of the war. Villagers sometimes oppose official memory projects and humanitarian 
initiatives - including Peru's Truth Commission - that that they see at odds with their 
own visions and agendas.  Finally, I examine the less predictable ways that villagers 
have redefined what it means to be Andean, including: the maintenance of village 
militarization, a return to hard-handed customary justice and the adoption of born-
again Christianity as a new form of moral order and social solidarity. 
  v
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 
 
I have been extremely lucky to have supportive friends and academic 
committee members at Duke, as well as in Peru that have helped me on my long 
road to finishing this dissertation.  I owe my intellectual development to my 
mentors, especially to my advisor Orin Starn, to his partner, writer and human rights 
advocate Robin Kirk and the strong support and time of my Diane Nelson, Anne 
Allison, Charles Piot, Marisol de la Cadena and Ralph Litzinger as well as to the 
rest of the Cultural Anthropology department at Duke.  Before Duke I was also 
lucky to have the advice and support of the Anthropology Department Master’s 
program at The George Washington University, including my advisor Richard 
Grinker and professor Catherine Allen, both of whom have given me support far 
beyond my M.A.  I could not have conducted my research in Ayacucho without my 
Quechua teachers Gina at the Centro de Estudios Bartolomé de las Casas in Cusco, 
Peru and Irma Flores in Huamanga.  My fellow researchers in Peru, Adam Warren, 
Alan “Inca Kola” Durston, Luis Uzategui, Tanya Vasquez, Jon Beasley Murray, 
Rocio Motta, Leigh Campoamor, Rocio Trinidad, Wendy Coxshall; Ayacucho 
historian Ponciano del Pino, Huantino anthropologists Jose Coronel, and Ludwig 
Huber, Jefrey Gamarra, IPAZ, Victor Belleza and Kimberly Theidon. I thank my 
friend Alejandro “Chan” Coronado who was my guide and translator on numerous 
trips, his wife Neva and their family, and to my friend Rómula who accompanied 
me on trips villages around Huamanga.   
  vi
Thank you to my colleagues and housemates in Huamanga Arthur Scaritt, 
Jaymie Heilman and Jonathan Ritter, and our times with Bacho at the Magica 
Negra. My graduate school colleagues and friends Nilgun Uygen, Margot Weiss, 
Jack Friedman, Susan McDonic, Julie London, Jenny Prough, Kimberly Wright, Jan 
French, Daniel Levinson Wilk, Ivonne Wallace Fuentes, Amy Mortensen and Jason 
Middleton for commenting on my work and support.  I owe a lot to my Durham 
friends, Zareen Kapadia, Hannah Rogers, Rebecca Gimenez and Megan Golonka 
for their feminist solidarity; and to my long term DC friends Andra Vilas Simon and 
Jamie, Joanne Hoff, Caroleene Paul, Sandra Yuen and Jenny Lee. Thank you to my 
best Chicago friend and fellow ABD, Alexis Avery and her family for moving to 
Santa Fe and offering much needed dissertation writing advice and support at the 
Aztec Cafe. Thank you to my family: Bobbie West, Anthony Yezer, Claire and Ben 
Yezer, Tim and Valerie West and my grandparents Robert and Dorothy West.   
Thank you to the doctor who helped me get along with everyone, Philip Spiro. 
My deepest thanks for helping me with the difficulty of being away from 
home for my research are owed to Rayda and Adela.  I am deeply indebted to 
Rayda, a caring teacher and very helpful translator and friend - Raydacha linda 
ancha debachkani.  Finally, there is no way this degree or dissertation could have 
been done without the help of the Adela Lopez Antay my best friend, and her family 
Cipriano Mendoza, and Pati Mendoza Lopez. 
Many of these chapters have benefited from colloquium discussions.  I am 
grateful to the staff of the School of American Research and for the scholarly advice 
  vii
of the my fellow researchers and friends, including Rebecca Allahyari, Tammy 
Bray, James Brooks, Catherine “Cam” Cocks, Jean Langford, Sharon Kaylen, 
Micaela di Leonardo, Rosamel Millaman Reinao, Nancy Owen Lewis, and Bill 
Saturno.  
Several institutions advised me on my research in Peru and I owe them great 
thanks: the Instituto de Defensa Legal, the Defensoria del Pueblo, and the many 
other institutions dedicated to human rights in Peru; and to the US based Human 
Rights Watch.  My research into the local land history was done at the PETT 
Archivo de Titulación de Tierras, Ministerio de Agricultura,  of the department of 
Ayacucho.  I thank Sr. Cipriano Lugan, Sr. Abogado Hugo de la Torre Toscano, Sr. 
Braudio Matos and Sr. Faustino Medina for all of their help in locating the 
documents.  In Lima I was affiliated with the Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, I 
especially thank Victoria Gonzalez and Carlos Ivan Degregori. 
My research and write-up was supported by generous grants and fellowships 
from the Department of Cultural Anthropology at Duke University, the Wenner 
Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, the Consortium for Latin American 
Studies at Duke and University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, US Foreign 
Language and Area Study Fellowship, the United States Institute for Peace, the 
Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation and the Weatherhead Fellowship at the 
School for American Research. 
Although I cannot thank them individually here, I owe the greatest debt and 
thanks to the villagers of Wiracocha, especially the five families with whom I 
  viii
became a comadre.  This dissertation is dedicated to them and to the memories of 
two deceased mentors: the late anthropologist and performance studies professor 
Dwight Conquergood, whose ethnographic research on Hmong shamanism and 
Chicago’s Latin Kings inspired Northwestern University undergraduates like 
myself.  Finally I dedicate this study to my grandfather, Robert H. West, who passed 
away on April 28th, 2007. 
  ix
TABLE OF CONTENTS 
PAGE 
 
LIST OF FIGURES………………………………………………………………...xi 
 
INTRODUCTION…………………………………………………………………..1 
   
CHAPTER 
 
1.  Children of the Deceived: Teachers and Shining Path  
Intermediaries in Rural Ayacucho……………………………..………30 
 
2.  From Revolution to Revelation:  Evangelical Christianity  
in the Andes…………………………………..………………………..67 
 
3.   Truth, Rumor and the End Times: Understanding Peasant  
Opposition to the Truth Commission in “Post-conflict” Peru………..90 
 
4.       Military Drag and the "Right to Have Rights": Soldiers,  
          Cholos and Citizenship in Ayacucho ……………………………….122 
 
5.   The Return of the Leaf: Narco-terrorists, Culture -talk and  
  Reparations……………………………………………………….…174 
 
BIBLIOGRAPHY………………………………………………………………..209
                       
BIOGRAPHY…………………………………………………………………….229
   
                           
  x
Description:dirt roads of the Andes. Most combis in Peru led past lives as city vans in Japan or  chismoso [a gossip] and would kill you. Or, if your animals