History 170: Modern Latin America, 1810-Present Winter Term 2008 Leighton 305 Mon/Wed 11:10-12:20 and Fri 12:00-1:00 Prof. Andrew Fisher Office Phone Number: 646-4189 Office Hours: T/TH 10-12, W 3-4:30 & by appt. Home Phone Number: 645-4673 Office: Leighton 220 E-Mail: afisher@carleton.edu This course examines the origins and historical development of modern-day nations in Latin America. Of particular concern are the ways in which issues related to economic growth, national identity, and political participation have been contested and understood at both the elite and popular level from the late eighteenth century to the present. Attention will be paid to both general historical trends that impacted the region as a whole and specific national case studies. Given the size of enrollment, this will be a lecture-based course with supplemental discussion and informal small group activities. Previous knowledge of the region is not expected or required. Required Readings There are seven major texts for this course, all of which can be purchased at the bookstore. A copy of each is also available on closed-reserve at the library. Miguel Barnet, Biography of a Runaway Slave, trans. W. Nick Hill (Willimantic, CT: Curbstone Press, 1994). Samuel Brunk and Ben Fallaw, eds., Heroes & Hero Cults in Latin America (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2006). John Charles Chasteen, Heroes on Horseback: A Life and Times of the Last Gaucho Caudillos (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1995). John Charles Chasteen and James A. Wood, eds., Problems in Modern Latin American History: Sources and Interpretations. Revised Edition (Wilmington: SR Books, 2004). Carolina Maria de Jesus, Child of the Dark: The Diary of Carolina Maria de Jesus, trans. David St. Clair (Mentor Books, 1963). Karen Kampwirth, Feminism and the Legacy of Revolution: Nicaragua, El Salvador, Chiapas (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2004). Peter Winn, Weavers of Revolution: The Yarur Workers and Chile s Road to Socialism (Oxford University Press, 1986). In addition to the seven required texts, you will be asked to read a number of excerpted selections. Unless otherwise indicated, the readings can be accessed via e-reserves. Lucas Alamán, The Siege of Guanajuato in The Mexico Reader: History, Culture, Politics, edited by Gilbert M. Joseph and Timothy J. Henderson (Durham: Duke University Press, 2002), 171-188. Simón Bolívar, The Jamaica Letter, September 6, 1815 in John J. Johnson, Simón Bolívar and Spanish American Independence: 1783-1830 (Princeton: D. Van Nostrand, 1968), 151-171. Fidel Castro, History will Absolve Me The Cuba Reader: History, Culture, Politics, edited by Aviva Chomsky, Barry Carr, and Pamela Maria Smorkaloff (Durham: Duke University Press, 2003), 306-314. 1
Ariel Dorfman, The Last September 11 th, Los Angeles Times, September 17, 2001. Reproduced at http://www.unc.edu/depts/pfn/17sep2001/dorfman.pdf Ben Fallaw, Cárdenas and the Caste War that Wasn t: State Power and Indigenismo in Post- Revolutionary Yucatán, The Americas 53, no. 4 (1997): 551-577. [JSTOR] José Joaquín Fernández de Lizardi, The Mangy Parrot: The Life and Times of Periquillo Sarmiento, Written by Himself for His Children, translated by David Frye (Indianapolis: Hackett, 2004), 364-374. Ernesto Che Guevara, Message to the Tricontinental (1967) in Guerrilla Warfare, edited by Brian Loveman and Thomas M. Davies, Jr. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1985), 199-213. -----. Speech to Medical Students: A Child of My Environment in The Motorcycle Diaries: Notes on a Latin American Journey, translated by Alexandra Keeble (New York: Ocean Press, 2003), 167-175. Jacobo Timerman, Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number, translated by Toby Talbot (New York: Knopf, 1981), 42-59. [closed reserves] Getúlio Vargas, New Year s Address, 1938 and Vargas s Suicide Letter, 1954 in The Brazil Reader: History, Culture, Politics, edited by Robert M. Levine and John J. Crocitti (Durham: Duke University Press, 1999), 186-189, 222-224. [closed reserves] Juan Velasco, The Master Will No Longer Feed Off Your Poverty in The Peru Reader: History, Culture, Politics, edited by Orin Starn, Carlos Iván Degregori, and Robin Kirk (Durham: Duke University Press, 1995), 264-269. Evaluation Your final grade will be based on four principal components. They are: 1. Attendance and participation 10% 2. Map Quiz 5% 3. Analysis Paper 25% 4. Midterm Exam 25% 5. Final Exam 35% Ten percent of your final grade will be based on your attendance record and level of participation and engagement in all course-related activities. All students are expected to come to class prepared to share their questions and interpretations of the assigned reading. Another five percent of your final grade will be based on a map quiz given in class on Monday, January 14. You will be provided a blank political map of Latin America (meaning it will only include national boundaries; no names of cities, countries, geographic formations, etc.) on which you will be asked to identify a select number of countries and national capitals. An in-class midterm examination will take place on Friday, February 1. Its format is yet to be determined, although you can expect an essay component. Questions will most likely concern your understanding of the historical interpretations raised by the readings and lecture, and how they relate to some of the primary sources we have read. You will also be asked to write a document analysis paper (5-7 pages in length) on Carolina Maria de Jesus s Child of the Dark. The paper should offer both a close reading of the text and an effort to link the analysis to larger conceptual themes concerning Latin American history. I will provide further instructions and some possible framing questions for the essay later on in the term. The paper is due by 5 p.m. on Friday, February 15. N.B.: Late paper policy: Out of fairness to the rest of the class, assignments submitted after the designated deadline will be deducted one-third of a grade for each day late. Thus, a 2
paper otherwise meriting a B+, but submitted on Sunday, February 17, will be given a B- (deducted for 2 late days). I will consider waiving the policy only in cases caused by exceptional circumstances, such as health problems or a family emergency. It remains your responsibility, however, to inform me of your situation as soon as possible. A final exam will comprise the final thirty-five percent of your course grade. The format is yet to be determined, but it may include questions concerning the definition and historical significance of key terms from the course, short responses, and interpretative essays. You can expect to discuss the cumulative lessons of the course in some of your answers (in other words, the test will not be limited to material covered since the last writing assignment). Tentative Course Outline (assigned readings are to be completed by the date they appear) Sun, January 6: Course Introduction ***(Leighton 305, 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.)*** I. Early Nation-Building & Politics (weeks 2-3) Mon, January 7: Colonial Tensions & Creole Patriotism Read: Chasteen & Wood, 1-21, 49-63 Read: Fernández de Lizardi, 364-374 Wed, January 9: Spanish-American Independence Movements Read: Chasteen & Wood, 23-44, 276 Read: Alamán, The Siege of Guanajuato, 171-188 Fri, January 11: Simón Bolívar & Early Nation-Building Efforts Read: Brunk & Fallaw, 21-57 Read: Bolívar, Jamaica Letter, 151-171 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 286-287 Mon, January 14: Caudillo Rule Read: Chasteen, 1-60 Read: Brunk & Fallaw, 58-82 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 77-87 MAP QUIZ Wed, January 16: Elite Ideologies and Rivalries Read: Chasteen, 61-124 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 103-126, 203-210 Fri, January 18: The Rural Poor and Politics Read: Chasteen, 125-181 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 87-101 II. The Neocolonial Order (weeks 4-5) Mon, January 21: Slavery and Freedom in Comparative Perspective Read: Barnet, Biography of a Runaway Slave, 11-57, 203-208 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 63-66 3
Wed, January 23: Race & Nation in Fin de Siècle Latin America Read: Barnet, Biography of a Runaway Slave, 61-98 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 127-148 Fri, January 25: Order and Progress: Export-Led Growth and Rural Pauperization Read: Barnet, Biography of a Runaway Slave, 99-146 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 149-174 Mon, January 28: US Imperialism & Cuban Independence Read: Barnet, Biography of a Runaway Slave, 147-200 Wed, January 30: The Mexican Revolution Read: Brunk & Fallaw, 83-148 Fri, February 1: IN-CLASS MIDTERM III. Populism and Reform, ca. 1930-1960 (weeks 6-7) Mon, February 4: MIDTERM BREAK (no class) Wed, February 6: Redeeming the Revolution: Lázaro Cárdenas Read: Fallaw, Cárdenas and the Caste War Read: de Jesus, Child of the Dark, pages 3-52, 177-187 Fri, February 8: The Emergence of the Middle Sectors & Latin American Nationalism Read: Chasteen & Wood, 175-186, 210-213 Read: Brunk & Fallaw, 148-171 Read: de Jesus, Child of the Dark, 53-72 Mon, February 11: Brazilian Populism: Vargas Read: de Jesus, Child of the Dark, 73-112 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 236-245 Read: Vargas, New Year s Address and Suicide Letter, 186-189, 222-224 Tues, February 12: Eric Van Young Lefler Lecture (Leighton 304 at 5 p.m.) Wed, February 13: Argentine Populism: Juan Perón Read: de Jesus, Child of the Dark, 113-137 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 186-195, 227-236 Fri, February 15: Argentine Populism: Evita Perón Read: Chasteen & Wood, 214-222, 227-236 Read: Brunk & Fallaw, 229-263 PAPER DUE BY 5 PM IV. The Rise of the Revolutionary Left and its Repression, ca. 1950-1990 (weeks 8-9) Mon, February 18: Land Reform, Bananas, & CIA Coup d état: Guatemala Read: Chasteen & Wood, 195-201, 245-249, 288-289 Read: Guevara, Speech to Medical Students, 167-175 (continues on next page) 4
Read: Winn, Weavers of Revolution, 3-31 Wed, February 20: The Cuban Revolution Read: Winn, Weavers of Revolution, 32-52 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 251-258, 281-286 Read: Castro, History will Absolve Me, 306-314 Fri, February 22: Exporting Revolution Read: Winn, Weavers of Revolution, 53-75 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 261-264, 289-299 Read: Guevara, Message to the Tricontinental, 199-213 Mon, February 25: Circumventing Revolution: Peru Read: Winn, Weavers of Revolution, 79-136 Read: Velasco, The Master, 264-269 Wed, February 27: Chile s Road to Socialism Read: Winn, Weavers of Revolution, 139-205 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 269-274 Fri, February 29: Military Rule and Civilian Dissent in the Southern Cone Read: Winn, Weavers of Revolution, 209-256 Read: Timerman, Prisoner without a Name, 42-59 V. Remaking Paradigms in Contemporary Latin America (weeks 10-11) Sun, March 2: Screening of Patricio Guzmán s Chile: Obstinate Memory (1997) Mon, March 3: The Fall of Right-Wing Dictatorships and the Human Rights Legacy Read: Dorfman, The Last September 11 th (Internet resource) Read: Kampwirth, Feminism and the Legacy of Revolution, ix-18 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 222-226 Wed, March 5: The Fall of the Revolutionary Vanguard: The Sandinistas and Sendero Luminoso Read: Kampwirth, Feminism and the Legacy of Revolution, 19-74 Fri, March 7: Cold War Casualty: Guatemala and the Pan-Maya Movement Read: Kampwirth, Feminism and the Legacy of Revolution, 75-111 Read: Chasteen & Wood, 258-261 Mon, March 10: A New Path? The EZLN and the Shifting Tide against Neo-Liberalism Read: Kampwirth, Feminism and the Legacy of Revolution, 112-164 (optional: 165-196) Read: Chasteen & Wood, 312-322 FINAL EXAM: Friday, March 14 (8:30-11:00 a.m.) 5