The customary division of Latin American history into colonial and modern periods has come into question recently. This new book demonstrates that there was a middle period in Latin America's historical evolution since the European Conquest-one no longer colonial, but not yet modern-which has left a legacy in its own right for contemporary Latin America. This volume is a narrative text on Latin America's "long nineteenth century," from the period of Imperial Reforms in the late eighteenth century up to the Great Depression. Incorporating local and regional studies from the last three decades which have profoundly broadened and altered customary views about Latin America, the book is a synthesis of this "Middle Period." Latin America in the Middle Period re-evaluates the relation between subsistence and market production in the post-independence economy, stressing regional diversity. It also re-evaluates the mechanics of politics, which customarily have been seen as liberal-conservative, caudillo-oligarchy, region-nation, and merchant-landowner-industrialist. The text discusses the acceleration of the forces of modernization, the rise of industrial capitalism, and the beginnings of a national ordering of life in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries which eroded the fabric of Middle Period society, a process consummated in the aftermath of world depression in the 1930s, ushering in modern Latin America. This new volume is an excellent resource for courses in nineteenth-century Latin American history and the second half of Latin American history survey.
About the AuthorStuart F. Voss is a Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of History at Plattsburgh State University of New York.
ReviewsStuart F. Voss, one of the leading specialists of nineteenth-century Latin America, presents the results of a decade-long project synthesizing the secondary literature for Iberian America in the "long" nineteenth century, 1750-1929. Voss masterfully presents a grand narrative that builds on his previous works, On the Periphery of Nineteenth Century Mexico, 1810-1877 (1982) and Notable Family Networks in Latin America (1984). His new book, Latin America in the Middle Period, 1750-1929, solidly constructed, calls on Latin Americanists to reconceptualize the traditional periodization of "Colonial" and "Modern into a novel trio of epochs: "Colonial," "Middle," and "Modern."...The work is ideal for classroom adoption. -- Victor M. Macias-Gonzalez, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse * New Mexico Historical Review *
Voss has made a valuable and original contribution to the understanding of a large part of Latin America's history. * European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies *
Book InformationISBN 9780842050258
Author Stuart F. VossFormat Paperback
Page Count 368
Imprint Rowman & LittlefieldPublisher Rowman & Littlefield
Weight(grams) 517g
Dimensions(mm) 227mm * 164mm * 20mm