Share
Fr. 72.00
Meade, Ta Meade, Teresa A Meade, Teresa A. Meade
History of Modern Latin America - 1800 to the Present 2e - 1800 to the Present
English · Paperback / Softback
Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)
Description
Now available in a fully-revised and updated second edition, A History of Modern Latin America offers a comprehensive and accessible introduction to the cultural and political history of this vibrant region from the onset of independence to the present day. Throughout the text, examples of what transpired in a single nation at a specific time - such as the slave revolt in Haiti, the patriarchal rules governing marriage in Brazil, construction of the Panama Canal, and the Mexican Revolution - are examined as representative of wider phenomena and serve as segues into the ideas, conflicts, social movements, and cultural trends that populate Latin America's rich historical landscape. The lives of prominent figures are introduced alongside those of ordinary people from a diverse array of social, racial, and ethnic backgrounds. These first-hand accounts are interspersed throughout the narrative, along with documents and excerpts from fiction, as a means of providing tangible examples of historical ideas. With added coverage of the recent opening of diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Cuba and an all new chapter exploring challenges posed by economic growth and environmental sustainability, the new edition of this popular text will be an invaluable resource for students and teachers of Latin American history.
List of contents
Preface to the Second Edition xiii
Acknowledgments xvii
1 Introduction to the Land and Its People 1
Geography 2
People 2
Economies 7
Politics 8
Culture and Entertainment 13
Latin America: Past and Present 22
Topics and Questions for Discussion 23
2 Latin America in 1790 24
Colonial Background 25
Power and Privilege 29
Wealth 30
Colonial Administration 34
Enlightened Monarchy 36
The Agents of the Reform 37
Disorder and Rebellion 39
Discontent and Disorder in Brazil 41
Changing Gender Roles 42
On the Road to Independence 44
Nationalism and American Culture 44
Conclusion 49
Topics and Questions for Discussion 49
3 Competing Notions of Freedom 51
Five Roads to Independence 52
African Slavery in the Americas 53
Slavery and the Countryside 57
Slavery in the Cities 58
Treatment and Punishment 60
Slavery and the Church 60
African Medicine and Religious Practices 61
Resistance and Rebellion 63
The Sugar Colony of Saint-Domingue 65
The Slave Revolt 66
The Revolution Betrayed 68
Brazil's Independent Empire 69
Independence in Mexico 71
South American Independence 73
Post-independence Changes in Racial and Gender Status 77
The Last Holdout of Slavery in Spanish America 78
Latin America in a ChangingWorld Order 80
Conclusion 81
Topics and Questions for Discussion 82
4 Fragmented Nationalisms 84
Searching for Political and Economic Unity 84
NewWorld "Feudalism" 86
Post-independence Politics 90
Argentina and the Tyrants 92
Populist Caudillismo: Paraguay and Bolivia 93
After Caudillismo 96
Race, Race Mixture, and Liberalism 97
Gender and Liberalism 100
Intersections of Gender, Race, and Class 103
Nationalism 105
Conclusion 108
Topics and Questions for Discussion 108
5 Latin America's Place in the Commodity Chain 110
The Guano Boom 111
Nitrates in Chile 113
The Growth of S~ao Paulo 116
Colombian Coffee 118
The Rubber Boom 119
Expanding Exports 121
Mexico and US Expansionism 122
The North American Invasion 124
General L¿opez de Santa Anna 126
The New Age of Imperialism 127
Central America and the Panama Canal 128
Ecuador and the "Panama" Hat 130
Independence at Last? Cuba and Puerto Rico 131
Conclusion 138
Topics and Questions for Discussion 138
6 Immigration, and Urban and Rural Life 140
Asian Immigration 141
European Immigration 142
The Southern Cone 144
Life on the Pampas 146
British Investment 148
The Changing Cultural Landscape 149
Urban Renewal 152
Mexico and Benito Jüarez 154
French Invasions 155
The Rise of Porfirio D¿?az 156
Intellectual Theories: Positivism and Eugenics 157
Conclusion 159
Topics and Questions for Discussion 160
7 Revolution from Countryside to City: Mexico 161
The Porfiriato 162
Opposition to the Porfiriato 164
Constitutional Opposition 165
Madero Assassinated 167
US Intervention 168
Women in Combat 169
Carranza as President 170
The Constitution of 1917 171
Aftermath of Struggle 174
Agrarian Revolts in Latin America 175
Conclusion 177
Topics and Questions for Discussion 178
8 The Left and the Socialist Alternative 180
Socialism on theWorld Stage 180
Social Reform and the Middle Class 181
Anarchism, Socialism, and Anarcho-syndicalism 182
Women in theWorkforce 183
Colombia: Resistance to the United Fruit Company 185
The Labor Movement 186
Socialism and the Arts 188
Tenentes Revolt and Brazilian Communism 190
Modern ArtWeek in Brazil 191
Women in the Arts 192
Socialism versus Capitalism 194
Jos¿e Carlos Mari¿ategui 195
Conclusion 196
Topics and Questions for Discussion 196
9 Populism and the Struggle for Change 198
Get ¿ ulio Vargas and "New State" Politics 200
Juan Per¿on and Peronism 202
Per¿on's Fall from Grace 205
Politics Engendered 206
Revolutionizing Mexico: L¿azaro C¿ardenas 208
Populism in Colombia and Peru 209
Central America 211
The Long Twentieth Century 215
Conclusion 216
Topics and Questions for Discussion 216
10 Post-WorldWar II Struggles for Sovereignty 218
WorldWar II 218
TemporaryWorker Program 220
Post-war Latin America 223
Military versus Civilian Rule 224
The Absolute Dictator: Rafael Trujillo 227
Americas in Transition: Guatemala and Bolivia 230
Guatemala 231
Revolution in Bolivia 233
Mining and the Voice of Bolivian Activism 235
The Revolution in Decline 237
Conclusion 239
Topics and Questions for Discussion 240
11 Cuba: Guerrillas Take Power 241
"HistoryWill Absolve Me" 243
Causes for Discontent 243
The RevolutionaryWar 244
Ernesto "Che" Guevara 247
What Difference Did the Revolution Make? 250
The Special Period in Peacetime 252
Democratic Shortcomings 253
Cuba and theWorld 255
Conclusion 258
Topics and Questions for Discussion 258
12 Progress and Reaction 260
Modernization and Progress 260
Brazil's Military Coup 262
The National Security State 263
Latin America's Youth Movement 264
Mexico 265
The Massacre at Tlatelolco 265
The Chilean Road to Socialism 267
The Chilean Road to Socialism Dead Ends 269
Urban GuerrillaWarfare: Uruguay 270
Urban GuerrillaWarfare: Argentina 272
Dictatorship and State Terror 274
Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo 277
TheWar of the Malvinas/Falkland Islands 278
Movements for Revolutionary Change: Peru 280
Sendero Luminoso, Shining Path 281
Women and Shining Path 283
Repression and Fujimori 284
Conclusion 285
Topics and Questions for Discussion 286
13 Revolution and Its Alternatives 287
A Changing Catholic Church 288
Marxism and Catholic Humanism 289
The Opposition 291
The Somozas versus Sandino: the Next Generation 292
The Sandinista Opposition 293
Sandinistas in Power 296
United States and the Sandinistas 299
Effects of the ContraWar 300
Central America in Turmoil: El Salvador and Guatemala 301
Politics of Repression in El Salvador 302
The Opposition 304
The Fighting Ends 305
Guatemala: The BloodiestWar 306
The Evangelical Alternative 309
Colombia: The LongestWar 311
TheWar on Drugs in Latin America 314
Conclusion 316
Topics and Questions for Discussion 317
14 The Americas in the Twenty-first Century 318
TheWashington Consensus 319
Brazil and theWorkers' Alternative 321
TheWorkers' Party in Power 322
Bolivia: Twenty-first-century Indigenismo 324
Venezuela and the Legacy of Hugo Ch¿avez 326
The Bolivarian Mission 329
The Pink Tide Stalls 330
Chile's Transition to Democracy 331
New Social Movements 332
Movements for Racial and Gender Equality 334
Conclusion 338
Topics and Questions for Discussion 338
15 A Future of Sustainable Cooperation? 340
Opponents Confront Free Trade 341
The Latin Americanization of the United States 344
Immigration and Neoliberalism 346
Central American Refugees 347
Sharing the Environment and the Cost of Stewardship 349
Conclusion 353
Topics and Questions for Discussion 354
Further Reading 355
Index 369
About the author
Teresa Meade is Florence B. Sherwood Professor of History and Culture at Union College, New York. She is the author of A Brief History of Brazil (2nd edition, 2009), "Civilizing" Rio: Reform and Resistance in a Brazilian City (2005), and co-editor of A Companion to Gender History (Wiley, 2004) and Science, Medicine and Cultural Imperialism (1991). She has written widely on Latin America as well as on women and gender history.
Summary
Now available in a fully-revised and updated second edition, A History of Modern Latin America offers a comprehensive and accessible introduction to the rich cultural and political history of this vibrant region from the onset of independence to the present day.
Product details
Authors | Meade, Ta Meade, Teresa A Meade, Teresa A. Meade |
Publisher | Wiley, John and Sons Ltd |
Languages | English |
Product format | Paperback / Softback |
Released | 31.12.2015 |
EAN | 9781118772485 |
ISBN | 978-1-118-77248-5 |
No. of pages | 416 |
Series |
Blackwell Concise History of the Modern World Wiley Blackwell Concise History of the Modern World Wiley Blackwell Concise Histor |
Subjects |
Humanities, art, music
> History
Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous |
Customer reviews
No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.
Write a review
Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.