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H212 Latin American Culture and Civilization II Spring 1994 Woodburn 009 4-5:15 T-Th Dr. Peter Guardino Office: Ballantine 708 Phone 5-6108 This course will survey the history of Latin America from the early nineteenth century to the present. This period witnessed both the construction of polities based on national states and the evolution of capitalist economies. The course will focus on how social movements both reflected and drove these two major transformations. Areas of concern will include the social implications of various models of economic development, the opportunities and problems which result from economic ties to wealthy countries, changing ethnic, gender, and class relations in Latin America, and the diverse efforts of Latin American people to construct stable and equitable political systems. The general approach of the course will be thematic but examples will be drawn from the histories of various Latin American countries, including Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Nicaragua, Guatemala, El Salvador, Peru, Chile, Peru, Guatemala, El Salvador and Cuba. Required Books (Available at the Bookstore) Benjamin Keen. A History of Latin America: Vol. II National Period to Present 4th ed. 1991. Houghton Mifflin.** Sandra Lauderdale Graham. House and Street: The Domestic World of Servants and Masters in Nineteenth-Century Rio de Janeiro. Austin: University of Texas Press 1992. Isabel Allende. The House of Spirits. Bantam 1986. Alicia Partnoy. The Little School: Tales of Disappearance and Survival in Argentina. Pittsburgh: Cleis Press 1986. Sonia Alvarez. Engendering Democracy in Brazil: Women's Movements in Transition Politics. Princeton: Princeton University Press. **Don't be fooled by the chapter numbers listed below. We will be reading almost all of this volume of Keen. Requirements: You are required to complete reading assignments by the day on which we will discuss them. In addition there will be two essay exams and a short paper. The first essay exam will be held on FEB. 17 in class. The second will be held during finals week. The short paper for this class will be due during our class meeting on MARCH 24. You will be penalized for each day this assignment is late. Your paper should be 4-6 pages long.
Grading: Midterm 20%
Paper 30%
Final 50%
Week 1: The Colonial Legacy Reading: Lauderdale Graham, House and Street, 1-58 Jan. 11 Introduction Jan. 13 Production and Politics in Colonial Latin America Week 2 Colonialism and Independence Reading: Keen Chapter 9 Jan. 18 Class, Ethnicity and Gender in Early Latin America Jan. 20 Latin American Independence Week 3: The Search for Order Reading: Lauderdale Graham, House and Street, 59-137 Jan. 25 Mexico: Rural Unrest and Foreign Interventions Jan. 27 Brazil: Empire and Social Control Week 4: The Promise of Export-Oriented Development Reading: Keen, Chapter 10 Feb. 1 Discussion of House and Street Feb. 3 Argentina's Revolution on the Pampas Week 5 The Costs and Perils of Export-Oriented Development Reading: Keen, Chapter 12 Feb. 8 Chile and Peru: Development and Foreign Intervention Feb. 10 The Mexican Revolution Week 6: Food for Thought Feb. 15 Export-Oriented Development Reprised Feb. 17 Midterm Exam Week 7: Urbanization, Populism, and Import Substitution Keen, Chapter 12; Begin Allende, The House of Spirits Feb. 22: Argentina: Peronism Feb. 24 Mexico, 1930-1960s Week 8: Revolutions and U.S. Intervention Keen, Chapter 17; Continue Allende, The House of Spirits March 1 Guatemala: Revolution, Intervention, Aftermath March 3 The Cuban Revolution Week 9 Reform and Response Finish Allende, The House of Spirits March 8 Chile, 1950-1973 March 10 Discussion of The House of Spirits Week 10: Dictatorship and Repression Reading: Begin Partnoy, The Little School March 22 Film: The Official Story March 24 Film: The Official Story Week 11 Dictatorship and Repression, cont. Reading: Finish Partnoy, The Little School March 29 "El Proceso" in Argentina March 31 Discussion of The Little School and The Official Story Week 12 Crisis in Central America Reading: Keen, Chapter 18 April 5 Civil War in El Salvador April 7 The Nicaraguan Revolution Week 13 Authoritarianism and Foreign Debt Reading: Start Alvarez, Engendering Democracy April 12 Video: Capital Sins: Authoritarianism and Democratization April 14 Debt and Liberalization Week 14 Gender and Migration Reading: Continue Alvarez, Engendering Democracy April 19 Video: Continent on the Move: Migration and Urbanization April 21 Gender in Contemporary Latin America Week 15 Review and Speculation Reading: Finish Alvarez, Engendering Democracy April 26 Discussion of Engendering Democracy April 28 Review
Information provider: Department of History and Program in Latin American Studies University of North Carolina at Charlotte 9201 University City Boulevard Charlotte, North Carolina 28223 (704) 687-2027 Fax: (704) 687-3218 Email: clah@uncc.edu
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