John Wiley & Sons A Companion to Latin American History Cover The Companion to Latin American History collects the work of leading experts in the field to create .. Product #: 978-1-4051-3161-2 Regular price: $204.67 $204.67 In Stock

A Companion to Latin American History

Holloway, Thomas H. (Editor)

Blackwell Companions to World History

Cover

1. Edition December 2007
544 Pages, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-4051-3161-2
John Wiley & Sons

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The Companion to Latin American History collects the work of
leading experts in the field to create a single-source overview of
the diverse history and current trends in the study of Latin
America.

* Presents a state-of-the-art overview of the history of Latin
America

* Written by the top international experts in the field

* 28 chapters come together as a superlative single source of
information for scholars and students

* Recognizes the breadth and diversity of Latin American history
by providing systematic chronological and geographical
coverage

* Covers both historical trends and new areas of interest

List of Figures, Tables, and Maps vii

Notes on Contributors viii

Introduction 1

Thomas H. Holloway

1 Early Population Flows in the Western Hemisphere 10

Tom D. Dillehay

2 Mesoamerica 28

John Monaghan and Andrew R. Wyatt

3 Tradition and Change in the Central Andes 42

Jeffrey Quilter

4 Portuguese and Spaniards in the Age of European Expansion
58

William D. Phillips, Jr. and Carla Rahn Phillips

5 Exploration and Conquest 73

Patricia Seed

6 Colonial Brazil (1500-1822) 89

Hal Langfur

7 Institutions of the Spanish American Empire in the Hapsburg
Era 106

Susan Elizabeth Ramírez

8 Indigenous Peoples in Colonial Spanish American Society
124

Kevin Terraciano

9 Slavery in the Americas 146

Franklin W. Knight

10 Religion, Society, and Culture in the Colonial Era 162

Rachel Sarah O'Toole

11 Imperial Rivalries and Reforms 178

John Fisher

12 The Process of Spanish American Independence 195

Jaime E. Rodríguez O.

13 New Nations and New Citizens: Political Culture in
Nineteenth-century Mexico, Peru, and Argentina 215

Sarah C. Chambers

14 Imperial Brazil (1822-89) 230

Judy Bieber

15 Abolition and Afro-Latin Americans 247

Aline Helg

16 Land, Labor, Production, and Trade: Nineteenth-century
Economic and Social Patterns 264

Aldo A. Lauria-Santiago

17 Modernization and Industrialization 285

Colin M. Lewis

18 Practical Sovereignty: The Caribbean Region and the Rise of
US Empire 307

Mary A. Renda

19 The Mexican Revolution 330

Adrian A. Bantjes

20 Populism and Developmentalism 347

Joel Wolfe

21 The Cuban Revolution 365

Luis Martínez-Fernández

22 The National Security State 386

David R. Mares

23 Central America in Upheaval 406

Julie A. Charlip

24 Culture and Society: Latin America since 1900 424

Robert McKee Irwin

25 Environmental History of Modern Latin America 443

Lise Sedrez

26 Women, Gender, and Family in Latin America, 1820-2000
461

Nara Milanich

27 Identity, Ethnicity, and "Race" 480

Peter Wade

28 Social and Economic Impact of Neoliberalism 494

Duncan Green

Index 512
"For many readers, this work will prove helpful in engendering a
broader understanding of the layers, complexities, and array of
approaches in studies of Latin America. Summing Up: Highly
recommended." (CHOICE, February 2009)

"Blackwell is to be congratulated on offering a comprehensive
review drawing together the disparate threads of the history of the
many nations which make up the southern half of the American
continent ... .For the undergraduate student of the general
reader seeking a handy overview to the history of the region the
present volume provides an excellent introduction." (Reference
Reviews, Issue 7 2008)

"The 30 scholars who contributed these 28 essays covering
prehistoric times to the present represent the fields of
anthropology, archaeology, ethnography, gender studies, history,
political science, and Spanish. They furnish readers with an
excellent addition to the body of works exploring Latin America.
Entries are ordered logically and pragmatically and lend structure
to a comprehensive approach to the study of Latin America. This
work treats Brazil as a distinctive entity and explores women,
gender, family, and modern environmental history. The editor
addresses the appropriateness of the descriptor "Latin America."
The inclusion of these elements is timely, lending to the
completeness of coverage. The maps are important to the few entries
that include them and provide the reader with graphical data.
However, the small size and indiscernible formatting of the maps
undermines their potential usefulness. Because of the scholarly
tone and depth of information provided in each entry, readers who
already have a foundational knowledge of the region will extract
the greatest benefit. Nevertheless, for many readers, this work
will prove helpful in engendering a broader understanding of the
layers, complexities, and array of approaches in studies of Latin
America. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division
undergraduates and above." (A. G. Garza, California State
University, Stanislaus, Choice, February 2008)

"This volume is an accessible and welcome contribution to the
general field of Latin American Studies. Overall, the volume is
excellent with just the right mix of generalization and
particularity. This volume is smartly structured, well informed,
and written by top scholars in the field." (The Americas:
Quarterly Review of Inter-American Cultural History, April
2007)

"Up-to-the-minute syntheses of scholarly literature on a wide array
of topics, clearly and authoritatively presented. An indispensable
tool for any student of Latin America's past and
present."

-Reid Andrews, University of Pittsburgh

"This excellent collection reminds readers of the depth and
highly developed nature of Latin American Studies in the
twenty-first century. Discussions of methods, historiography, and
recent trends provide a sophisticated introduction that is useful
for students and faculty in many different disciplines."

-Jeffrey Lesser, Emory University

"An impressive team, under able editorship, has put together a
detailed, up-to-date and comprehensive volume which conveys a
wealth of information and does not 'talk down' to the
intelligent reader."

-Alan Knight, St Antony's College
Thomas H. Holloway is Professor of Latin American History at the University of California at Davis, where he was Director of the Hemispheric Institute on the Americas from 2000 to 2007. He served as President of the Latin American Studies Association, 2000-01, and Executive Secretary of the Conference on Latin American History, 2002-07. He has taught widely on Latin American history since 1974. His research focuses mainly on the social and economic history of Brazil. His previous books include Immigrants on the Land: Coffee and Society in São Paulo, 1886-1934 (1980) and Policing Rio de Janeiro: Repression and Resistance in a 19th-century city (1993).

T. H. Holloway, University of California, Davis, USA