Description

Book Synopsis
This unique reader offers an engaging collection of essays that highlight the diversity of Latin America's cultural expressions from independence to the present. Leading historians explore funerals, dance and music, letters and literature, spectacles and monuments, and world's fairs and food. These themes and events highlight the ways in which a wide range of individuals with copious, at times contradictory, motives attempted to forge identity, turn the world upside down, mock their betters, forget their troubles through dance, express love in letters, and altogether enjoy life. The authors analyze case studies from Argentina, Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, and Trinidad-Tobago, tracing how their examples resonate in the rest of the region. They show how people could and did find opportunities to escape, if only occasionally, their daily drudgery, making lives for themselves of greater variety than the constant quest for dominance, drive for profits, o

Trade Review
William Beezley and Linda Curcio-Nagy demonstrate the centrality of popular culture to the understanding of history. They analyze song, dance, ceremony, funerals, regalia, icons, exhibitions, protest, and literature to measure values and provide deep insights regarding class, gender, and race. This book is a tour de force. -- John Mason Hart, University of Houston
This revision of a foundational text on the history of Latin American popular culture brings exciting energy to an already dynamic field. New essays and the revised introduction further expand our understanding of a wide range of everyday cultural practices—music, dance, love letters, funerals, cooking, popular celebrations—and their complex relationship with elite national building projects. In conjunction with the best essays from the previous edition, this new material gives us a fascinating, provocative, and insightful glimpse into a vital aspect of Latin American history—one that still eludes most historical studies of the region. Reading this edition, I was struck even more forcibly by the ingenuity of historians of popular culture and by the impossibility of making sense of Latin American history without it. -- Robert Buffington, University of Colorado
Latin American Popular Culture since Independence demonstrates that history can be serious fun. This wide-ranging collection leads the reader along less traveled paths through Latin America’s last two centuries. Moreover, it brings together a distinguished group of talented researchers who share their expertise with wit and sensitivity. The individual essays truly bring unvarnished practices and unheralded historical actors to life, whether they treat religion, dance, death, food, or forms of story telling. Aside from describing past practices, these scholars also examine historical efforts to alter and shape popular culture and fashion national identity. It is a truly riveting examination of culture as lived, invented, and often manipulated in modern Latin American history. -- Edward Wright-Rios, Vanderbilt University

Table of Contents
Introduction Chapter 1: Piety and Public Space: The Cemetery Campaign in Veracruz, 1789–1810 Pamela Voekel Chapter 2: Church, Humboldt, and Darwin: The Tension and Harmony of Art and Science Stephen Jay Gould Chapter 3: Black Kings, Blackface Carnival, and Nineteenth-Century Origins of the Tango John Charles Chasteen Chapter 4: "Cartas y cartas, compadre . . . .": Love and other letters from Río Frío William E. French Chapter 5: Peddling the Pampas: Argentina at the Paris Universal Exposition of 1889 Ingrid E. Fey Chapter 6: Death and Disorder in Mexico City: The State Funeral of Manuel Romero Rubio Matthew D. Esposito Chapter 7: Images of Indians in the Construction of Ecuadorian Identity at the End of the Nineteenth Century Blanca Muratorio Chapter 8: Many Chefs in the National Kitchen: Cookbooks and Identity in Nineteenth-Century Mexico Jeffrey M. Pilcher Chapter 9: The New Order: Diversions and Modernization in Turn-of-the-Century Lima Fanni Muñoz Cabrejo Chapter 10: From the Ruins of the Ancien Régime: Mexico's Monument to the Revolution Thomas L. Benjamin Chapter 11: Racial Parity and National Humor: Carmen Miranda's Samba Performances, 1930–1939 Darién J. Davis Chapter 12: Oil, Race, and Calypso in Trinidad and Tobago, 1909–1990 Graham E. L. Holton Chapter 13: The Dictator's Seduction: Gender and State Spectacle during the Trujillo Regime Lauren H. Derby Chapter 14: En el corazón del pueblo: Pedro Infante's Funeral, the Pueblo Motif, and the Contest over his Legacy Sal Acosta Chapter 15: Nostalgia for the Future: The New Song Movement in Nicaragua Janet L. Sturman

Latin American Popular Culture since Independence

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    A Paperback by Linda A. Curcio-Nagy

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 1/10/2011 12:10:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781442212558, 978-1442212558
      ISBN10: 1442212551

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This unique reader offers an engaging collection of essays that highlight the diversity of Latin America's cultural expressions from independence to the present. Leading historians explore funerals, dance and music, letters and literature, spectacles and monuments, and world's fairs and food. These themes and events highlight the ways in which a wide range of individuals with copious, at times contradictory, motives attempted to forge identity, turn the world upside down, mock their betters, forget their troubles through dance, express love in letters, and altogether enjoy life. The authors analyze case studies from Argentina, Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Mexico, Nicaragua, Peru, and Trinidad-Tobago, tracing how their examples resonate in the rest of the region. They show how people could and did find opportunities to escape, if only occasionally, their daily drudgery, making lives for themselves of greater variety than the constant quest for dominance, drive for profits, o

      Trade Review
      William Beezley and Linda Curcio-Nagy demonstrate the centrality of popular culture to the understanding of history. They analyze song, dance, ceremony, funerals, regalia, icons, exhibitions, protest, and literature to measure values and provide deep insights regarding class, gender, and race. This book is a tour de force. -- John Mason Hart, University of Houston
      This revision of a foundational text on the history of Latin American popular culture brings exciting energy to an already dynamic field. New essays and the revised introduction further expand our understanding of a wide range of everyday cultural practices—music, dance, love letters, funerals, cooking, popular celebrations—and their complex relationship with elite national building projects. In conjunction with the best essays from the previous edition, this new material gives us a fascinating, provocative, and insightful glimpse into a vital aspect of Latin American history—one that still eludes most historical studies of the region. Reading this edition, I was struck even more forcibly by the ingenuity of historians of popular culture and by the impossibility of making sense of Latin American history without it. -- Robert Buffington, University of Colorado
      Latin American Popular Culture since Independence demonstrates that history can be serious fun. This wide-ranging collection leads the reader along less traveled paths through Latin America’s last two centuries. Moreover, it brings together a distinguished group of talented researchers who share their expertise with wit and sensitivity. The individual essays truly bring unvarnished practices and unheralded historical actors to life, whether they treat religion, dance, death, food, or forms of story telling. Aside from describing past practices, these scholars also examine historical efforts to alter and shape popular culture and fashion national identity. It is a truly riveting examination of culture as lived, invented, and often manipulated in modern Latin American history. -- Edward Wright-Rios, Vanderbilt University

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Chapter 1: Piety and Public Space: The Cemetery Campaign in Veracruz, 1789–1810 Pamela Voekel Chapter 2: Church, Humboldt, and Darwin: The Tension and Harmony of Art and Science Stephen Jay Gould Chapter 3: Black Kings, Blackface Carnival, and Nineteenth-Century Origins of the Tango John Charles Chasteen Chapter 4: "Cartas y cartas, compadre . . . .": Love and other letters from Río Frío William E. French Chapter 5: Peddling the Pampas: Argentina at the Paris Universal Exposition of 1889 Ingrid E. Fey Chapter 6: Death and Disorder in Mexico City: The State Funeral of Manuel Romero Rubio Matthew D. Esposito Chapter 7: Images of Indians in the Construction of Ecuadorian Identity at the End of the Nineteenth Century Blanca Muratorio Chapter 8: Many Chefs in the National Kitchen: Cookbooks and Identity in Nineteenth-Century Mexico Jeffrey M. Pilcher Chapter 9: The New Order: Diversions and Modernization in Turn-of-the-Century Lima Fanni Muñoz Cabrejo Chapter 10: From the Ruins of the Ancien Régime: Mexico's Monument to the Revolution Thomas L. Benjamin Chapter 11: Racial Parity and National Humor: Carmen Miranda's Samba Performances, 1930–1939 Darién J. Davis Chapter 12: Oil, Race, and Calypso in Trinidad and Tobago, 1909–1990 Graham E. L. Holton Chapter 13: The Dictator's Seduction: Gender and State Spectacle during the Trujillo Regime Lauren H. Derby Chapter 14: En el corazón del pueblo: Pedro Infante's Funeral, the Pueblo Motif, and the Contest over his Legacy Sal Acosta Chapter 15: Nostalgia for the Future: The New Song Movement in Nicaragua Janet L. Sturman

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