Modern Latin America

Catalog Search > Humanities & Social Sciences > 43.212

Note: This course is not available for the current semester.

Course No: 43.212; Last Offered: Summer 2013;

Course Description

Modern Latin America, a 200-level course, surveys Latin America from independence in the early nineteenth century to the present using primary sources, a textbook, and scholarly works. It begins with an understanding of the political, social, and economic context from which ideas of independence emerged and consideres the wars for independence. We will spend a significant part of the course studying nation-building: how did the leaders of new nations define their nations and the values that would guide them? Who was included and who was excluded in the process of nation-building? The next part of the course examines the demands of groups originally excluded: the indigenous population, women, and the poor. The portion of the course covering the twentieth century emphasizes Latin America's international connections, focusing on influence from the United States and the effectds of world wars on the region. Mass politics also emerge, and are expressed in the Mexican Revolution and in Peronism. We also wiill consider the Cuban Revolution and its wider effects in the region. We will conclude our survey of the region by considering how historical trends continue to affect politics today. For example, the Bolivian political scene continues to be affected by the events and outcome of the War of the Pacific (1879-1883) and by a strong indigenist movement.

Prerequisites & Notes

  • Prerequisites:
  • Special Notes:

Questions About This Course?

Contact the Advising Center at 978-934-2474 or Continuing_Education@uml.edu

Use the Back button in your browser to go back to search results.