A political satire against the Peru-Bolivian Confederation: La Mulata (1838) edited by Buenaventura Seoane
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18800/revistaira.201701.005Keywords:
Afrodescendant people, press, Peru-Bolivian Confederation, XIX century, Buenaventura SeoaneAbstract
This article analyses the contents of an unknown conservative newspaper entitled La Mulata that was against the Peru-Bolivian Confederation in October 1828. It was edited in Lima by the lawyer and politician Buenaventura Seoane. The
contents of the five numbers of La Mulata show that it was a newspaper for propaganda and political satire. Particularly, it focused on afro-descendant people, especially former slaves or libertos, to demonstrate how the lower sectors of the population can amend the loss of political freedom by adopting a patriotic attitude. La Mulata provides new insights to understand the political rhetoric of the Peruvian creolle nationalism in the first half of the nineteenth century.
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