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  • Contributors

Kendall W. Brown, professor of history at Brigham Young University, received his doctorate from Duke University under the direction of John J. TePaske. His publications have concentrated on the economic history of the Peruvian viceroyalty, particularly during the period of the Bourbon Reforms. He is currently writing a monograph on Huancavelica and a general history of Latin American mining. kendall_brown@byu.edu

Muriel Nazzari is an emeritus professor of history at Indiana University. She received her Ph.D from Yale University and has researched the family, women, sexuality, and race in colonial Brazil. A recent publication is “Favored Women, Subjected Indians: Settlement of the Estate of Pero d’Araujo,” in R. Boyer and G. Spurling, eds. Colonial Lives: A Documentary History (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000). nazzari@indiana.edu

Michael T. Ducey received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago where he studied under the guidance of John Coatsworth and Friedrich Katz. He is currently an assistant professor of history at the University of Colorado at Denver. Among his recent publications are “Village, Nation, and Constitution. Insurgent Politics in Papantla, Veracruz, 1810-21,” Hispanic American Historical Review 79:3 (August 1999). He is currently preparing a manuscript for publication titled “Rebellions and Nation Building: Social Protest in the Mexican Huasteca.” mducey@carbon.cudenver.edu

Seth Garfield received his Ph.D. in Latin American history from Yale University in 1996 under the direction of Emilia Viotti da Costa. He is currently assistant professor of history at the University of Texas at Austin, specializing in modern Brazilian history. He has published articles on indigenous-state relations in Brazil that have appeared in the Hispanic American Historical Review, the Journal of Latin American Studies, and the Brazil Reader. His book, Indigenous Struggle at the Heart of Brazil: State Policy, Frontier Expansion, and the Xavante Indians, 1937-1988, will be published by Duke University Press in July 2001. sgarfield@mail.utexas.edu [End Page iv]

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