
Exploitation, Inequality, and Resistance A History of Latin America since Columbus
by Burkholder, Mark; Rankin, Monica; Johnson, Lyman L.-
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Summary
Some examples of exploitation and inequality include slavery and other labor systems, sexual and gender exploitation, an inequitable economic relationship with foreign countries, repressive political systems through dictatorship and military regimes, and an unequal diplomatic relationship with the United States and other powerful nations. Despite deeply entrenched systems of injustice, Latin Americans remain notable for their resilience. Active and passive resistance to oppression and discrimination still persist in the twenty-first century, with native revolts and slave flights, unionization, the emergence of the Latin American women's movement, black-market economies, the emergence of populism, and various forms of revolt and revolution. Exploitation, Inequality, and Resistance: A History of Latin America since Columbus emphasizes these themes and analyzes the ways in which earlier events continue to resonate today.
Author Biography
Mark Burkholder is Curators' Professor of History at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. He is the coauthor, with Lyman L. Johnson, of Colonial Latin America, Ninth Edition (OUP, 2014).
Monica Rankin is Associate Professor of History at the University of Texas, Dallas.
Lyman L. Johnson is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: The Eve of Atlantic Empires
Iberia
Indigenous Societies in "The Indies"
Africa and the Early Slave Trade
Chapter 2: Exploration, Columbus, and Early Settlement
An Age of Exploration
The Caribbean Experiment
Chapter 3: Conquest and Failure on the Mainland
The Fall of the Aztec Empire
The Fall of the Inka Empire
Continued Conquest
Rewards of Conquest
Spectacular Failures
Brazil
Chapter 4: Invaders Alter the Indies
Demographic Disaster
Environmental Change
The Columbian Exchange
Chapter 5: Tools of Empire: Administration
Imperial Organization
The Sale of Royal Appointments in Spanish America
Municipalities
Native Communities
Administration in Brazil
Chapter 6: Tools of Empire: The Church
The Early Church
The Mature Church
The Inquisition
Chapter 7: Language, Education, and Idolatry
Indians in the Clergy?
Formal Education
Campaigns to Extirpate "Idolatry"
Chapter 8: Economies and Trade
Early Tribute
The Evolution of Labor Systems
Domestic Economies and Regional Trade
Mining: Gold and Silver
Sugar
Trans-Oceanic Trade
Chapter 9: Societies of Caste and Class
The Broad Base of New World Societies
Family: The Foundation of Society
Women in the Societies and Economies of the Indies
The Culture of Honor
Chapter 10: Living in an Empire
Urban and Rural Environments
Daily Life
Chapter 11: Expanding Empires
The Spanish Empire from the Late-Seventeenth Century to the 1750s
The Reforms of Charles III
Brazil in an Age of Expansion
Protest, Popular Insurrections, and Conspiracies
Chapter 12: The Age of Independence (I)
A Political Revolution
Early Insurrections in Spanish America
Rebellion in the Spanish Empire's Periphery
Rebellion in the Old Viceroyalties
Portugal and Brazil in an Era of Revolution
Chapter 13: The Age of Independence (II)
Societies at War
Social Change
Government and Political Life
Chapter 14: Colonies to Nations
Economic and Fiscal Consequences of Independence
Centralism or Federalism?
Caudillos
Chapter 15: Nation-State Formation
Politics and Parties
Mexico and la Reforma
Colombia and Liberal Reform
Liberals and Conservatives in Central America
Venezuela
Society and Culture in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
Chapter 16: Early Foreign Wars and Interventions
Inter-American Wars
Direct Intervention and Territorial Acquisition (1830s-1860s)
Manifest Destiny
U.S.-Mexican War
Filibusters
Spain and the Dominican Republic
French Intervention
Social and Cultural Impact of War
War, Nationalism, and National Heroes
Nationalism and the Written Word
Chapter 17: Progress and Modernization
Oligarchies
Argentina's Liberal Oligarchy
Mexico
The Age of Guano in Peru
Coffee Elite in Central America
Positivism
Mexico
Brazil
Venezuela and the Guzmanato
Peru
Social Limits of Progress
Chapter 18: The Age of Informal Imperialism
New Attitudes in the United States
Expansion of U.S. Trade
Venezuela and the Boundary Dispute
Cuba
Panama
Intellectual Response to Imperialism
Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
Chapter 19: Early Populism
Populist Responses
Populism and the Labor Movement
Early Populism in South America
Social and Cultural Dynamics
Revolutionary Populism
Indigenismo
Chapter 20: Depression and World War
The Great Depression in Latin America
Latin America and the World
Changes in Populism
Women's Suffrage
Mass Media and a National Imaginary
Chapter 21: Onset of Cold War
Leftism in Latin America
Post-War Economic Trends
Consumers and Culture at Mid-Century
Cold War Security and Politics
Chapter 22: Cuban Revolution
Interventions and Dictatorship
Revolution
New Government and Initial U.S. Reaction
Legacy of the Cuban Revolution
Chapter 23: National Security State and Dirty Wars
National Security State Defined
The United States and National Security Doctrine
The Emergence of National Security State Trends
Bureaucratic Authoritarianism
Cultural Expression under Authoritarianism
Chapter 24: Debt and the Lost Decade
Debt Crisis
Challenges to Neoliberalism
The Cuban Exception to Neoliberalism
Cultural Production in the Lost Decade and the Special Period
Latin American Tourism
Chapter 25: Violence and Security in the Late-Twentieth Century
Civil War in Guatemala
Other Violence in Central America
The United States and the Contras
Democratization and the End of Cold War
The Illegal Drug Trade
Social and Cultural Impact of Violence
Chapter 26: Latin America in the Twenty-First Century
The Turn "Left"
Regional Integration
New Developments in Drug Trafficking
Immigration
Globalization
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