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Cover of Argentina, the United States, and the Anti-Communist Crusade in Central America, 1977–1984

Argentina, the United States, and the Anti-Communist Crusade in Central America, 1977–1984On Sale

By Ariel Armony

Ariel Armony focuses, in this study, on the role played by Argentina in the anti–Communist crusade in Central America. This systematic examination of Argentina’s involvement in the Central American drama of the late 1970s and early 1980s fine–tunes our knowledge of a major episode of the Cold War era.…

Cover of The Bewitchment of Silver

The Bewitchment of SilverOn Sale

The Social Economy of Mining in Nineteenth-Century Peru

By José R. Deustua

Mining was crucial for the development of nineteenth-century Peru. Silver mining in particular was a key to both the export sector and the creation of an internal market and national development. The Bewitchment of Silver is an inquiry into the impact of that mineral on a national economy in a country at the periphery of nineteenth-century capitalism.…


Cover of Beyond the Barricades

Beyond the BarricadesOn Sale

Nicaragua and the Struggle for the Sandinista Press, 1979–1998

By Adam Jones

Throughout the 1980s, Barricada, the official daily newspaper of the ruling Sandinista Front, played the standard role of a party organ, seeking the mobilize the Nicaraguan public to support the revolutionary agenda.…

Cover of The Church and Revolution in Nicaragua

The Church and Revolution in Nicaragua

By Laura Nuzzi O'Shaughnessy and Luis Hector Serra

This volume addresses the complex issue of the Christian response to the Nicaraguan revolution from a perspective generally sympathetic to the Sandinista’s goals. Luis Serra, himself a Latin American who has worked with the peasantry, argues that the institutional Church has now become a major autonomous source of opposition to the revolution.…


Cover of Civil War, Civil Peace

Civil War, Civil Peace

Edited by Helen Yanacopulos and Joseph Hanlon

More than two hundred wars have been fought in the past halfcentury. Nearly all have been civil wars, and at the beginning of the twenty-first century, more than thirty civil wars were being fought. The “rules” of interstate war do not apply; each atrocity provokes retribution, and civil war takes on a brutal dynamic of its own.…

Cover of Claribel Alegría and Central American Literature

Claribel Alegría and Central American LiteratureOn Sale

Critical Essays

Edited by Sandra M. Boschetto-Sandoval and Marcia Phillips McGowan

These essays examine the multifaceted work of the Central American author whom Latin American literary historians consider precursor of “cultural dialogism” in poetry and fiction. As poet, essayist, journalist, novelist, and writer of “quasi–testimonio,” Alegría’s multiple discourses transgress the boundaries between traditional and postmodern political theories and practices.…


Cover of Collisions with History

Collisions with HistoryOn Sale

Latin American Fiction and Social Science from “El Boom” to the New World Order

By Frederick M. Nunn

Latin American intellectuals have traditionally debated their region’s history, never with so much agreement as in the fiction, commentary, and scholarship of the late twentieth century. Collisions with History shows how “fictional histories” of discovery and conquest, independence and early nationhood, and the recent authoritarian past were purposeful revisionist collisions with received national versions.…

Cover of Communities of Work

Communities of Work

Rural Restructuring in Local and Global Contexts

Edited by William W. Falk, Michael D. Schulman and Ann R. Tickamyer

The image of rural America portrayed in this illuminating study is one that is vibrant, regionally varied, and sometimes heroic. Communities of Work focuses on the ways in which rural people and places are affected by political, social, and economic forces far outside their control and how they sustain themselves and their communities in response.…


Cover of Conservative Thought in Twentieth Century Latin America

Conservative Thought in Twentieth Century Latin AmericaOn Sale

The Ideas of Laureano Gomez

By James D. Henderson

Laureano Gómez was president of Columbia in the early 1950s until overthrown by a military coup. He was also, for some fifty years, the leading exponent of Latin American conservatism, a political philosophy with roots in both nineteenth–century politics and religion.…

Cover of Constructive Engagement?

Constructive Engagement?

Chester Crocker & American Policy in South Africa, Namibia & Angola, 1981–1988

By J. E. Davies

The notion of engagement represents an indispensable tool in a foreign policy practitioner’s armory. The idea of constructive engagement is forwarded by governments as a method whereby pressure can be brought to bear on countries to improve their record on human rights, while diplomatic and economic contracts can be maintained.…


Cover of The Cuban Counterrevolution

The Cuban Counterrevolution

By Jesús Arboleya

For forty years the Cuban Revolution has been at the forefront of American public opinion, yet few are knowledgeable about the history of its enemies and the responsibility of the U.S. government in organizing and sustaining the Cuban counterrevolution.…

Cover of Cultivating Coffee

Cultivating Coffee

The Farmers of Carazo, Nicaragua, 1880–1930

By Julie A. Charlip

Many scholars of Latin America have argued that the introduction of coffee forced most people to become landless proletarians toiling on large plantations. Cultivating Coffee tells a different story: small and medium-sized growers in Nicaragua were a vital part of the economy, constituting the majority of the farmers and holding most of the land.…


Cover of Ethnic Conflict

Ethnic Conflict

Religion, Identity, and Politics

Edited by S.A. Giannakos

The outbreak of numerous and simultaneous violent conflicts around the globe in the past decade resulted in immense human suffering and countless lost lives. In part, both results were aided by inactivity or by belated and often misplaced responses by the international community to the embattled groups.…

Cover of Feminism and the Legacy of Revolution

Feminism and the Legacy of Revolution

Nicaragua, El Salvador, Chiapas

By Karen Kampwirth

In many Latin American countries, guerrilla struggle and feminism have been linked in surprising ways. Women were mobilized by the thousands to promote revolutionary agendas that had little to do with increasing gender equality.…


Cover of Gabriela Mistral

Gabriela MistralOn Sale

The Audacious Traveler

Edited by Marjorie Agosín

Gabriela Mistral is the only Latin American woman writer to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. Even so, her extraordinary achievements in poetry, narrative, and political essays remain largely untold.…

Cover of Immigration, Diversity, and Broadcasting in the United States 1990—2001

Immigration, Diversity, and Broadcasting in the United States 1990—2001

By Vibert C. Cambridge

The last decade of the twentieth century brought a maturing of the new racial and ethnic communities in the United States and the emergence of diversity and multiculturalism as dominant fields of discourse in legal, educational, and cultural contexts.…


Cover of José María Arguedas

José María ArguedasOn Sale

Reconsiderations for Latin American Studies

Edited by Ciro A. Sandoval and Sandra M. Boschetto-Sandoval

José María Arguedas (1911-1969) is one of the most important authors to speak to issues of the survival of native cultures. José María Arguedas: Reconsiderations for Latin American Cultural Studies presents his views from multiple perspectives for English-speaking audiences for the first time.…

Cover of Managing the Counterrevolution

Managing the Counterrevolution

The United States and Guatemala, 1954–1961

By Stephen M. Streeter

The Eisenhower administration's intervention in Guatemala is one of the most closely studied covert operations in the history of the Cold War. Yet we know far more about the 1954 coup itself than its aftermath.…


Cover of The Many Faces of Sandinista Democracy

The Many Faces of Sandinista DemocracyOn Sale

By Katherine Hoyt

Taking power in Nicaragua in 1979 as a revolutionary party, the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) was willing to put its fate in the hands of the Nicaraguan people twice, in 1984 and 1990. The party wrote a democratic constitution and then, remarkably, accepted the decision of the majority by relinquishing power upon its defeat in the 1990 election.…

Cover of Mariátegui and Latin American Marxist Theory

Mariátegui and Latin American Marxist Theory

By Marc Becker

José Carlos Mariátegui, the Peruvian political theorist of the 1920s, was instrumental in developing an indigenous Latin American revolutionary Marxist theory. He rejected a rigid, orthodox interpretation of Marxism and applied his own creative elements, which he believed could move a society to revolutionary action without the society having to depend upon more traditional economic factors.…



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