La aceptación del riesgo de incendio en Guayaquil durante los siglos XVI-XVIII

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Resumen

Indian cities frequently suffered fires; some of them being more susceptible than others to the voracity of the flames. On certain occasions, these calamities were the result of deliberate acts perpetrated by the Crown’s enemies. However, in the majority of cases, fires were attributed to the extreme susceptibility of urban environments, exacerbated by the population’s negligence and imprudence. There is no doubt that Indian societies were perfectly aware of this, as well as of the intrinsic duality of fire, its destructive potential and its vital function for the survival and prosperity of cities. Despite this, it would be a mistake to conceive of Indian societies solely as victims of fires. Therefore, the central purpose of this article is to reinterpret the history of a specific community, the colonial Guayaquil, by employing the epistemological category of Risk Acceptance. This, to better understand its complicated and troubled relationship with fires. By referring to Risk Acceptance, we not only consider societies as victims of the risks they themselves have generated by implementing erroneous adaptive strategies, that is, Constructed Risks, but we also explore the possibility that, in some cases, communities consciously have decided to become vulnerable to certain risks.

Título traducido de la contribuciónThe Acceptance of Fire Risk in Guayaquil during the 16th-18th Centuries
Idioma originalEspañol
Páginas (desde-hasta)317-336
Número de páginas20
PublicaciónCuhso
Volumen34
N.º2
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 27 dic. 2024
Publicado de forma externa

Palabras clave

  • colonial Guayaquil
  • risk acceptance
  • structural vulnerability
  • Subjective immunity
  • urban Fires

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