
From the moment news reached Peru in 1910 that Jorge Chávez Dartnell, a pilot of Peruvian parentage, had become the first man to fly across the Alps, aviation fired the imagination of the masses in his home country. His and other Peruvian pilots' achievements generated great optimism that this technology could lift Peru out of its self-perceived backwardness and transform it into a modern nation.Though poor infrastructure, economic woes, a dearth of technical expertise, and frequent pilot deaths slowed Peru's domestic aviation project, diverse groups saw in airplanes their own visions for Peruvian renewal. In this book, Willie Hiatt shows how politicians, businessmen, and military officials promoted the project as critical to the nation. At the same time, indigenous communities and provincial residents willingly gave up land for airfields, raised money to purchase aircraft for the military, named airplanes after sponsoring civic groups, towns, and regions, and breached police cordons at flying exhibitions to get close-up looks at planes and pilots. By 1928, three commercial lines were transporting passengers and goods from far-flung regions of the Amazon, highlands, and coast to Lima and beyond. Tracing the development of Peruvian aviation from heroic individual feats to essential infrastructure, The Rarified Air of the Modern shows how Peruvians mobilized airplanes to reflect their technological progress, their modern identity, and their nation's intertwining with the history of the West.
This book investigates how the adoption of aviation technology in early 20th-century Peru served as a catalyst for national identity and a perceived path toward modernity. Willie Hiatt, a historian specializing in Latin American technology and society, utilizes archival records, local newspapers, and government documents to construct his argument. He posits that aviation was not merely a technical import but a social project that engaged diverse segments of Peruvian society, from elite politicians to indigenous communities, in the pursuit of national progress.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of Latin American studies and the history of technology recognize this work as a nuanced examination of how peripheral nations engage with global technological trends. Readers frequently note the author's ability to balance high-level political analysis with the grassroots social history of aviation in the Andes.
Page Count:
248
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190248920
ISBN-13:
9780190248925
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