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Setbacks and Advances in the Modern Latin American Economy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 393

Setbacks and Advances in the Modern Latin American Economy

This volume explores several notable themes related to the economy in Latin America and offers insightful historical perspectives to understand national, regional, and global issues in the continent since the beginning of the 20th century to the present day. The collected essays focus on economic crises, the relationship of growth models to society and politics, the fluctuations of local economies, and regional protests. Other aspects of consideration in this area include the evolution of integrated regional trading blocs, the informal economy, and the destruction of the productive potential that has had a serious social, cultural, and environmental impact. The volume refuses to impose a traditional and uncritical linear historical narrative onto the reader and instead proposes an alternative interpretation of the past and its relation to the present.

Rural Disease Knowledge
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 277

Rural Disease Knowledge

Rural Disease Knowledge examines the ways in which knowledge of rural spaces and environments, on the one hand, and infectious diseases, on the other, have become inter-constituted since the late nineteenth century. With contributions by leading anthropologists and historians of medicine, it examines the epistemic co-constitution of the rural and of infectious diseases. Ranging from Brazil, Argentina, and Colombia to Java, Tanzania, West and South Africa, and Britain, the chapters cover diverse geographies, timelines, and diseases, including plague, brucellosis, leishmaniasis, yaws, yellow fever, nagana, sleeping sickness, and Chagas disease. The book considers how human interactions with in...

Intersectional Feminism in the Age of Transnationalism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 243

Intersectional Feminism in the Age of Transnationalism

Intersectional Feminism in the Age of Transnationalism: Voices from the Margins explores the limitations of the transnationalist approach to feminism and questions the neoliberal emphasis on individual freedom and consumer choice as the central goals of feminist activism. The contributions to the volume discuss such varied topics as fiction by Edwidge Dandicat, Judith Ortiz-Cofer, and Diamela Eltit; visual art of Laura Aguilar and Maruja Mallo; films directed by Lucrecia Martel; a TV series based on a novel by María Dueñas; the art-activism of Ani Ganzala and Zinha Franco; and the philosophical thought of Gloria Anzaldúa. All chapters proceed from the belief in the continued usefulness of intersectionality as a valuable category of critical analysis that is particularly necessary at the time when the effects of neoliberal globalization are undermining many familiar categories of critical inquiry.

Gender, Sexuality, and Power in Latin America Since Independence
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 326

Gender, Sexuality, and Power in Latin America Since Independence

Integrates gender and sexuality into the main currents of historical interpretation concerning Latin America.

La emancipación de América Central en su retrospectiva (1821–2021)
  • Language: es
  • Pages: 247

La emancipación de América Central en su retrospectiva (1821–2021)

The contributions gathered in this volume revisit the two centuries that have elapsed since Central America's independence in 1821. This highly complex political emancipation, together with the cultural and ethnic heterogeneity of the region, are reflected in the book, in which the multidimensionality of the historical processes, the persistent structures and the particularities of the Central American region are made evident.

Central American Migrations in the Twenty-First Century
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 369

Central American Migrations in the Twenty-First Century

"Central American Migrations in the Twenty-First Century is an interdisciplinary approach to human mobility in Central America and beyond"--

Health in the Highlands
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 383

Health in the Highlands

"In the early to mid-twentieth century, the governments of Ecuador and Guatemala sought to expand Western medicine within their countries, with the goals of addressing endemic diseases and improving infant and maternal health. These efforts often clashed with indigenous medical practices, particularly in the rural highlands. Drawing on extensive, original archival research, historian David Carey Jr. shows that indigenous populations embraced a syncretic approach to health, combining traditional and new practices. At times, the governments of both nations encouraged--or at least allowed--such a synthesis, yet they also attacked indigenous lifeways, going so far as to criminalize native medica...

The Business of Empire
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 289

The Business of Empire

The link between private corporations and U.S. world power has a much longer history than most people realize. Transnational firms such as the United Fruit Company represent an earlier stage of the economic and cultural globalization now taking place throughout the world. Drawing on a wide range of archival sources in the United States, Great Britain, Costa Rica, and Guatemala, Colby combines "top-down" and "bottom-up" approaches to provide new insight into the role of transnational capital, labor migration, and racial nationalism in shaping U.S. expansion into Central America and the greater Caribbean. The Business of Empire places corporate power and local context at the heart of U.S. impe...

The Company They Kept
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 315

The Company They Kept

In the late nineteenth century, migrants from Jamaica, Colombia, Barbados, and beyond poured into Caribbean Central America, building railroads, digging canals, selling meals, and farming homesteads. On the rain-forested shores of Costa Rica, U.S. entrepreneurs and others established vast banana plantations. Over the next half-century, short-lived export booms drew tens of thousands of migrants to the region. In Port Limon, birthplace of the United Fruit Company, a single building might house a Russian seamstress, a Martinican madam, a Cuban doctor, and a Chinese barkeep--together with stevedores, laundresses, and laborers from across the Caribbean. Tracing the changing contours of gender, k...