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Witness to the Age of Revolution

Graphic history portrays odyssey of Juan Bautista Túpac Amaru

BY KATHLEEN HOLDER

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Some stories of the past are so remarkable, they deserve to be shown as well as told.

A new graphic history by Professor Charles Walker brings to life the odyssey of Juan Bautista Túpac Amaru, whose account of his 40 years as a Spanish political prisoner was so harrowing that it was discounted as fiction and lingered for decades in obscurity.

"Witness to the Age of Revolution" uses images drawn from archival documents to chronicle Juan Bautista’s story and show readers how historians construct the past. Illustrated by South African artist Liz Clarke, the publication is part of a graphic history series published by Oxford University Press.

“I saw it as a fun summer project, but it took me two years or so,” said Walker, professor of history and director of the Hemispheric Institute on the Americas at UC Davis. “Historians are trained to guide [readers] through writing. And in a comic, you can’t do that — you have to let the images speak.”

A page from Witness to the Age of Revolution, written by Charles Walker and illustrated by Liz Clarke.

Walker briefly wrote about Juan Bautista in his award-winning 2014 book "The Túpac Amaru Rebellion." That book focused on the 1780–83 revolt that was launched in Peru by Juan Bautista’s halfbrother, José Gabriel Túpac Amaru, and spread to become the largest rebellion in the history of Spain’s American empire.

Walker said he had long wanted to give more attention to Juan Bautista and his ringside view of events during the Age of Revolution (1780s to 1820s) in the Americas and Europe.

Charles Walker, professor of history

A descendant of the last Inca rulers, Juan Bautista was imprisoned on both sides of the Atlantic after José Gabriel was executed and much of his family arrested or killed. Juan Bautista’s ordeal included two years in jail in Cusco; a 700-mile foot march in chains over the Andes to Lima; two years aboard a ship to Spain; and more than 30 years of detention in Ceuta, a Spanish garrison city on the northern tip of Africa.

In 1822, he was freed with the help of a priest and a Maltese-Argentine naval veteran and sent to Argentina, where he was hailed as a hero. Juan Bautista died in 1827 in Buenos Aires without fulfilling his dream of returning to his native Peru.

“I want to chronicle his story but not speak for Juan Bautista Túpac Amaru, whose first language was Quechua,” Walker writes in his preface.

In his own account of his life, Juan Bautista expressed his “hope that these memoirs make people think about how to prevent tyranny, which proved in my case to be so abominable.”

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