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The decades since the 1980s have witnessed an unprecedented surge
in research about Latin American history. This much-needed volume
brings together original essays by renowned scholars to provide the
first comprehensive assessment of this burgeoning literature.
The seventeen original essays in The Oxford Handbook of Latin
American History survey the recent historiography of the colonial
era, independence movements, and postcolonial periods and span
Mexico, Spanish South America, and Brazil. They begin by
questioning the limitations and meaning of Latin America as a
conceptual organization of space within the Americas and how the
region became excluded from broader studies of the Western
hemisphere. Subsequent essays address indigenous peoples of the
region, rural and urban history, slavery and race, African,
European and Asian immigration, labor, gender and sexuality,
religion, family and childhood, economics, politics, and disease
and medicine. In so doing, they bring together traditional
approaches to politics and power, while examining the quotidian
concerns of workers, women and children, peasants, and racial and
ethnic minorities.
This volume provides the most complete state of the field and is an
indispensible resource for scholars and students of Latin America.
This Oxford Handbook surveys the large and growing field of Latin
American history by bringing together the principal themes and
approaches over the past three decades. Essays address indigenous
peoples of the region, colonial history, independence movements,
rural history, slavery and race, European and Asian immigration,
labor movements, gender and sexuality, popular religion, family and
childhood, economic history, politics, and disease and medicine.
The contributors include top scholars in the field.
This edited volume places Jewish-Latin Americans within the context
of Latin American and ethnic studies. It departs from traditional
scholarship that segregates Jews as inhabitants "in" Latin America
republics rather than as citizens "of" Latin American republics.
The essays draw examples primarily from Argentina and Brazil, the
two South American countries with the largest Jewish populations,
and span from the late nineteenth century into the 1990s.
By giving primacy to the national identity of Jewish-Latin
Americans, the essays included here emphasize human actors and
accounts of lived experiences. Lesser and Rein's thought-provoking
introduction outlines seven new formulations of the relationship
between Jews, the nation-state, and their Diasporic experience.
Individual contributors then pursue new perspectives of the Jewish
experience, including those of the working class, labor organizing
and anarchist activities, women, and the reconceptualization of
racism and anti-Semitism.
"Contributors: "
Edna Aizenberg, Marymount Manhattan College of New York
Judah M. Cohen, Indiana University
Roney Cytrynowicz, the Arquivo HistA3rico Judaico Brasileiro
Sandra McGee Deutsch, University of Texas at El Paso
Donna J. Gu, Ohio State University
JosA(c) C. Moya, UCLA and Barnard College at Columbia
University
Rosalie Sitman, Tel Aviv University
Natasha Zaretsky, Princeton University
Erin Graff Zivin, University of Pittsburgh
"Moya commands not only the statistical sources but the literary
and folklorical ones as well, weaving them in a history that is
both analytical and narrative...A superb book that will be a
standard monument, not only for Spanish migration and Argentine
history, but for migration history in general."
Walter Nugent, University of Notre Dame
"A major achievement, it represents a vast, comprehensive research
effort on two continents, using a world-wide background literature
and a stunning array of research techniques, all well integrated,
on a topic of large scope and significance. The entire enterprise
is watched over by an acute, curious, lively mind in notable
equilibrium and equanimity, bringing the research to life, fereting
out the implications of widely scattered and apparently disparate
facts, and reaching many new, significant, and well founded
conclusions."
James Lockhart, University of California, Los Angeles
"By far the most original on its subject, this book will become a
landmark study in Latin American history."
David Rock, University of California, Santa Barbara
"The scope and depth of Moya's research are impressive...His
imaginative use of sources and evidence and lively, frequently
entertaining prose make this a stimulating, satisfying, and
ascinating study...This is scholarship that is meticulous,
well-reasoned, and highly original."
Ida Altman, University of New Orleans
"One of the truly first-rate studies in the vast migration
literature--an authentic tour-de-force."
William Douglass, University of Nevada, Reno
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