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Latin America
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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
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Colonial Period Unit 3
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Age of Exploration Portugal and Spain – Henry the Navigator, Columbus Territory marked by Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) – Portugal gets Brazil – Spain gets the rest
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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
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Conquest Immigration, commerce, and exploitation Colonies established with natives as serfs, but they mostly die – Causes importation of slaves Encomiendas
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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
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Colonial Economy Based primarily on mining, then agriculture to provide for miners Trade limited to Spanish ships Total exploitation of native resources and labor
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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
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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
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Society Mestizos Peninsulares Creoles Women were subordinate, couldn’t own property, marriages were arranged
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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
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Revolutions Unit 4
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Influences American – Revolutions in the Western Hemisphere are possible French – Yay liberty! Yay no king! Woah…let’s not get crazy Haitian – Oh crap
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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
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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
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1820-1870 Britain becomes neocolonial power – Demand for raw materials for industrialization expands economy – Benefits mostly the landholding elite Liberal politicians restore rights
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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
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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
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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
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20 th Century Unit 5
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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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