The Making of an Intellectual: Orlando Fals-Borda, 1948-1958

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Juan Mario Díaz

Abstract

The decade 1948–1958 influenced Fals-Borda’s later career much more than his critics have recognised so far. By tracking many previously unstudied primary sources, this article looks at Fals-Borda’s positivist stage, which has been generally regarded as a hindrance to his career, against the backdrop of his personal and professional motivations to become a rural sociologist. Thus, it argues that his abandonment of the establishment and commitment to the peasant struggle for land in the 1970s were much less a disjunction than a continuation of some concerns and leitmotifs wholeheartedly embraced since the very beginning of his career.

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Author Biography

Juan Mario Díaz, University of Sheffield

Juan Mario Díaz holds a PhD from the University of Roehampton, London.  He is a socio-historical researcher whose work focused around the themes of resistance through art and literature, the socio-political history of literary ideas in Latin America and peace-building and social justice. His PhD research analysed one of the central themes of Fals-Borda’s intellectual and political career: his critique of the ideology of political violence in Colombia. It was a primary-sources based and inter-disciplinary project incorporating history, philosophy, sociology, theology and political analysis. Before his PhD, he studied philosophy, literature and theology at Bolivariana and Javeriana Universities in Colombia, where he also lectured in and researched on Literature and Theology. He is currently appointed as a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Sheffield in the UK.