“Citizenship” is an ongoing biased notion. In this week’s reading we learned that, post-independence, granting citizenship was a challenge for Latin American countries. Granting citizenship was determined by those highest in the caste system – the whites. Citizenship was neither … Continue reading →
Posted in Blogs, Week 6 | Tagged with Citizenship, slavery
I really enjoyed learning about the caudillos and everything that went along with and around them this week. First off, just getting some more detail on what the post-independence scene in Latin America looked like was good. I obviously knew that independence did not bring great stability or peace to the area, but to learn of […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 5 | Tagged with
I really enjoyed learning about the caudillos and everything that went along with and around them this week. First off, just getting some more detail on what the post-independence scene in Latin America looked like was good. I obviously knew that independence did not bring great stability or peace to the area, but to learn of […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 5 | Tagged with
The first thing that I would like to comment on is the ongoing theme of the Western liberal overstepping its boundaries. There seems to be a reoccurring phenomenon that could be called the “White savior complex”. In the case of post-colonial Latin America, it was the liberals who hoped to enforce a strong central power […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 5 | Tagged with caudillos, Slaughterhouse
The first thing that I would like to comment on is the ongoing theme of the Western liberal overstepping its boundaries. There seems to be a reoccurring phenomenon that could be called the “White savior complex”. In the case of post-colonial Latin America, it was the liberals who hoped to enforce a strong central power […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 5 | Tagged with caudillos, Slaughterhouse
In this week’s lecture, it was once said that “The governing Latin America was like trying to plow this sea.” I have a much better understanding of why this seems to be the case after this weeks lecture. With the rise of liberal ideas in the nineteenth and twentieth century, it gained acceptance in Europe […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 5 | Tagged with caudillos, independence, latin america, liberalism, military, misplaced, schwartz
In this week’s lecture, it was once said that “The governing Latin America was like trying to plow this sea.” I have a much better understanding of why this seems to be the case after this weeks lecture. With the rise of liberal ideas in the nineteenth and twentieth century, it gained acceptance in Europe […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 5 | Tagged with caudillos, independence, latin america, liberalism, military, misplaced, schwartz
In my past studies I always found the caudillos a very interesting Latin American cultural phenomenon. In previous readings it says the origin of a caudillo state was not the civil war stricken environment that was so common in Latin America after Independence from Spanish rule, but rather it was the cultural idea of machismo. […]
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In my past studies I always found the caudillos a very interesting Latin American cultural phenomenon. In previous readings it says the origin of a caudillo state was not the civil war stricken environment that was so common in Latin America after Independence from Spanish rule, but rather it was the cultural idea of machismo. […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 5 | Tagged with
After reading Esteban Echeverría’s “The Slaughterhouse,” it seemed to me that the main purpose of this story was to construct a dichotomy between the organized, urban centers and the pastoral inland provinces. The story seems to simplify the complexities of a young nation down to a struggle to find direction between ‘urban civilization’ and ‘savagery.’ […]
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