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Latin America. Focus Again, we will focus on the forces that acted on Latin America – Latin American agency not significant in terms of this course Begin.

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Presentation on theme: "Latin America. Focus Again, we will focus on the forces that acted on Latin America – Latin American agency not significant in terms of this course Begin."— Presentation transcript:

1 Latin America

2 Focus Again, we will focus on the forces that acted on Latin America – Latin American agency not significant in terms of this course Begin in Unit 3 with arrival of Spanish and Portuguese explorers – Primarily Spain, but will highlight comparison/contrast with Portugal

3 Colonial Period Unit 3

4 Age of Exploration Portugal and Spain – Henry the Navigator, Columbus Territory marked by Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) – Portugal gets Brazil – Spain gets the rest

5 Meeting the Natives Conquistadors – Hernan Cortez destroys the Aztecs – Francisco Pizarro destroys the Inca At first, just taking tribute – Leave political structures in tact and put Europeans on top

6 Conquest Immigration, commerce, and exploitation Colonies established with natives as serfs, but they mostly die – Causes importation of slaves Encomiendas

7 Settlement Slave importation, immigration of women shifts process from conquest to settlement Spanish style cities, missionaries, administrative institutions (included the Church) Spaniards come to better themselves, serve god, become a new nobility Encomiendas banned, so plantations and haciendas formed

8 Colonial Economy Based primarily on mining, then agriculture to provide for miners Trade limited to Spanish ships Total exploitation of native resources and labor

9 Colonial Government Lawyers and judges ran the government for the crown Viceroys in control in the New World of various segments Church plays a major role – Missionaries – Education – Part of the government

10 Portugal in Brazil Similarities Many missionaries and key role for the Church Plantation system similar Both imported slaves Develop a unique culture, blending Spanish and native Differences Brazil’s economy was mainly sugar plantations (gold and diamonds later) Political control remained in Europe Completely culturally dependent on Portugal

11 Society Mestizos Peninsulares Creoles Women were subordinate, couldn’t own property, marriages were arranged

12 18 th Century Reforms New king removes corrupt officials and takes more control Economy becomes less diverse All benefit the empire, but not local elites, who will eventually revolt – Higher taxes and rising prices from more government involvement

13 Revolutions Unit 4

14 Influences American – Revolutions in the Western Hemisphere are possible French – Yay liberty! Yay no king! Woah…let’s not get crazy Haitian – Oh crap

15 Independence Movements Mexico – Hidalgo pushes peasants to revolt – Conservative creoles eventually establish moderate republic South America – Bolivar in the north, San Martin in the south – Fail to create united regions, but independent republics form Brazil – Formed an empire, Portuguese king’s son

16 New States Abolished slavery, but only slowly granted full rights to non-whites – Elites maintained control – Women remained subordinate – Racial differences didn’t go away Caudillos – local military leaders – took control after economic problems

17 1820-1870 Britain becomes neocolonial power – Demand for raw materials for industrialization expands economy – Benefits mostly the landholding elite Liberal politicians restore rights

18 1880-1920 Great Boom – Profit from increased demand for raw materials, becoming more export-dependent Mexico – Railroads help economy, modernization but on the backs of peasants – Limited protests sparked 1910 revolution Argentina – Economy expands, beef exports – Heavy European influence from immigration – Socialists force reforms America becomes major player: Panama Canal, colonies

19 Mexico 1821 – independence (briefly monarchy, but a republic) Caudillo – Santa Anna War with America (1848), big loss, liberals take over Conservatives bring Maximillian from Europe to be emperor Executed, replaced by dictator Porfirio Diaz – Economic growth, but repression

20 Brazil Military put down regional revolts Shifted to coffee cultivation More slavery, economic growth, foreign investment, and immigrant labor Military coup overthrew monarch in 1889, violently repressed peasants

21 20 th Century Unit 5

22 Mexican Revolution Diaz was mean – Repressed peasants – Foreigners owned economy, elites only benefited Zapata, Villa lead revolution Obregon takes control with a republican constitution promising education and land reform – Nationalism and indigenism

23 The Depression During WWI, import-substitution industrialization. Inflation followed Rise of populism and nationalism, with Depression, caused attack on liberalism and capitalism Population growth, dominance of cities  new social problems

24 Ideological Changes Labor gained power, European immigrants brought new ideologies – Middle-class allied with elites, bringing new protests from poor Land reform in Mexico. Corporatism – like state-run guilds for all industries and workers – Growth without labor conflict

25 After WWII Challenge of trying to industrialize and “decolonize” War brought economic growth, socialist ideology – Guatemala: nationalist reforms, companies got US to intervene and stop land reforms, causing more unrest and guerrilla conflict – Cuba becomes communist with social reforms but no freedom or growth

26 Military Option Thought they knew how to organize and run things, were above petty politicians Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Peru, Uruguay had military interventions in the 1960s-70s Bureaucratic authoritarian regimes: – imposed dictatorships, repression and torture controlled critics – Nationalistic and anti-communist – Controlled inflation, caused growth – Hurts the workers

27 Present Times Military steps back, democracy takes root Populist socialist leaders in some places Women slowly gained equality, at first were subordinated within political parties Urbanization Population movements


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