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基本説明
Consists of twelve essays on general themes such as the growth of the Latin American Economies as a result of their accelerating integration into the expanding international economy; relations with the European powers and the United States.
Full Description
The Cambridge History of Latin America is the first authoritative large-scale history of the whole of Latin America - Mexico and Central America, the Spanish-speaking Caribbean (and Haiti), Spanish South America and Brazil - from the first contacts between the native peoples of the Americas and Europeans in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries to the present day. A major work of collaborative international schoarship, the Cambridge History of Latin America has been planned, co-ordinated and edited by a single editor, Dr Leslie Bethell, reader in Hispanic American and Brazilian History at University College London. It will be published in eight volumes. Each volume or set of volumes examines a period in the economic, social, political, intellectual and cultural history of Latin America.
Contents
1. Latin America and the international economy, 1870-1914 William Glade; 2. Latin America and the international economy from the First World War to the World Depression Rosemary Thorp; 3. Latin America, the United States and the European powers, 1830-1930 Robert Freeman Smith; 4. The population of Latin America, 1850-1930 Nicolás Sánchez-Albornoz; 5. Rural Spanish America, 1870-1930 Arnold Bauer; 6. Plantation economies and societies in the Spanish Caribbean, 1860-1930 Manuel Moreno Fraginals; 7. The growth of Latin American cities, 1870-1930 James R. Scobie; 8. Industry in Latin America before 1930 Colin M. Lewis; 9. The urban working class and early Latin American labour movements, 1880-1930 Michael M. Hall, and Hobart A. Spalding Jr; 10. Political and social ideas in Latin America, 1870-1930 Charles A. Hale; 11. The literature, music and art of Latin America, 1870-1930 Gerald Martin; 12. The Catholic Church in Latin America, 1830-1930 John Lynch.