“Workshop of Revolution is an extremely well-researched, pathbreaking book, which makes new and substantial contributions to Latin American, working-class, and Atlantic history. Presenting an immense wealth of new archival material, Lyman L. Johnson not only respectfully and meticulously re-creates the lives and times of artisans in late-colonial Argentina, but also connects their lives to the wider society, broad imperial issues such as the slave trade, and the revolutionary forces emerging in the Atlantic world.”—Kenneth J. Andrien, author of Andean Worlds: Indigenous History, Culture, and Consciousness under Spanish Rule, 1532–1825
“This important book presents a completely new interpretation of Argentina’s independence era. Lyman L. Johnson uses Buenos Aires artisans as an entryway into the war of independence, depicting both the lower classes of Buenos Aires and the city itself with sensitivity and intelligence. It should be noted that Workshop of Revolution is a fine urban history.”—Charles F. Walker, author of Shaky Colonialism: The 1746 Earthquake-Tsunami in Lima, Peru, and Its Long Aftermath
“[I]n Workshop of Revolution Johnson exhibits a mastery of late-colonial archival sources and the deep, thoughtful analysis of a veteran historian. This important addition to the history of pre-independence Buenos Aires succeeds at expertly situating a traditional microstudy of urban laborers within the larger trends of Atlantic history.... Workshop of Revolution contributes to the history of race and class in colonial Spanish America, persuasively showing how workers were important and complex actors — albeit a class divided on the eve of independence.”
-- Edward P. Pompeian Labor
“Workshop of Revolution is an outstanding book. Its solid research, insightful analysis and excellent comparative perspectives make it mandatory reading for anyone interested in topics related to late colonial history, Atlantic history, social and economic history, and early independent Argentine and Latin American history.”
-- Jorge Nállim Journal of Colonialism & Colonial History
“[A] major contribution by one of the field’s best historians. . . . Highly recommended.”
-- K. L. Racine Choice
“In this superbly written work, Professor Johnson presents a book that successfully integrates Latin American and Atlantic history through the examination of the plebeians in Buenos Aires during the last decades of colonial rule in the Americas. This work goes beyond social history; it illuminates rich aspects of the urban history, daily life, gender, and political history of Buenos Aires, always connected to the broader Atlantic context. …This work is an important contribution for debates on decolonisation and state formation, and it will capture the interest of scholars of other regions of Latin America, from Mexico to Brazil. The book constitutes a good reading for graduate seminars, as well as many chapters that could be assigned for undergraduate courses.”
-- Fabricio Prado Itinerario
“Lyman Johnson’s valedictory study of plebeian labor and politics in late colonial Buenos Aires is a masterwork of social and political history…. His work is a landmark study that will critically inform future work on colonial popular politics and social history.”
-- James E. Sanders The Americas
“I praise his book, for Johnson offers tantalizingly novel perspectives on long-lasting historiographical puzzles. Methodology and sources often get in the way of most scholars' visions, when in fact they ought to be means in order to answer questions…. Johnson show that in-depth local history can alter our understanding of much larger processes.”
-- Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra Latin American Research Review
"An extraordinarily close look at every aspect of the life of artisans and laborers in Buenos Aires, from types of dwellings and shop culture to forms of leisure and sociability."
-- Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra Latin American Research Review