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Religion and Revolution in Peru: 1920-1945
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2015
Extract
The interim years between the two world wars in Peru witnessed a proliferation of original ideas among Peruvian leftists on the relationship between religion and revolutionary change as a result of their efforts to re-examine national realities and bring about a radical change in Peruvian society. Young social thinkers and protesters such as José Carlos Mariátegui, Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre, Luís Valcárcel and others felt that the new Peru must incorporate and synthesize the best elements of Peru's past and present with the best ideas emanating from revolutionary Russia and Mexico. In their quest to construct a program of action for a revolutionary Peru, the generation of the twenties and thirties realized the necessity of going beyond the literary liberalism of the grand master of Peruvian anti-clericalism, Manual González Prada. They endeavored to propose a new, positive program which would neither discard nor neglect such an integral part of national life as the Roman Catholicism of the majority of Peruvians. Even more, they consciously explored ways by which the popular Catholicism of the Peruvian lower classes might be converted into a source of energy for the coming revolution.
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References
1 A fuller discussion of González Prada’s anti-clericalism may be found in Basadre, Jorge, Historia de la República del Perú (5th ed.; Lima: Ediciones Historia, 1964), 10, 4391–4399.Google Scholar Also, for a study of González Prada’s impact on succeeding generations, see the article by McNicolls, Robert, “The Intellectual Origins of Aprismo,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 23, (August, 1943), 424–440.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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