[1]
Agosin, M. 1987. Irma Muller. The human tradition in Latin America: the twentieth century. Scholarly Resources.
[2]
Alan Knight 1994. Popular Culture and the Revolutionary State in Mexico, 1910-1940. The Hispanic American Historical Review. 74, 3 (1994), 393–444.
[3]
Alan Knight 1985. The Mexican Revolution: Bourgeois? Nationalist? Or Just a ‘Great Rebellion’? Bulletin of Latin American Research. 4, 2 (1985), 1–37.
[4]
Alan Knight 1984. The Working Class and the Mexican Revolution, c. 1900-1920. Journal of Latin American Studies. 16, 1 (1984), 51–79.
[5]
Alexander Wilde 1999. Irruptions of Memory: Expressive Politics in Chile’s Transition to Democracy. Journal of Latin American Studies. 31, 2 (1999), 473–500.
[6]
Alfred W. Crosby 1967. Conquistador y Pestilencia: The First New World Pandemic and the Fall of the Great Indian Empires. The Hispanic American Historical Review. 47, 3 (1967), 321–337.
[7]
Allende, I. 1986. The house of the spirits. Black Swan.
[8]
Allende, I. 1994. The house of the spirits. Black Swan (Transworld).
[9]
American Journeys: Journal of the First Voyage of Columbus: 2003. http://www.americanjourneys.org/aj-062/.
[10]
Andrien, K.J. 2002. ‘Ángel Santana Suárez, Cuban Sugar Worker’. The human tradition in colonial Latin America. Scholarly Resources. 75–88.
[11]
Andrien, K.J. 2002. The human tradition in colonial Latin America. Scholarly Resources.
[12]
Anthony McFarlane 1995. Rebellions in Late Colonial Spanish America: A Comparative Perspective. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 14, 3 (1995), 313–338.
[13]
Arias, E.D. 2006. Drugs & democracy in Rio de Janeiro: trafficking, social networks, & public security. University of North Carolina Press.
[14]
Arias, E.D. and Goldstein, D.M. 2010. Violent democracies in Latin America. Duke University Press.
[15]
Articles 27 and 123 of the 1917 Mexican Constitution: http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/mexico/1917-Constitution.htm.
[16]
Bakewell, P.J. 1997. A history of Latin America: empires and sequels 1450-1930. Blackwell.
[17]
Bakewell, P.J. 1997. A history of Latin America: empires and sequels 1450-1930. Blackwell.
[18]
Bakewell, P.J. and Holler, J.Z. 2010. A history of Latin America to 1825. Wiley-Blackwell.
[19]
Barman, R.J. 1988. Brazil: the forging of a nation, 1798-1852. Stanford University Press.
[20]
Bergad, L. 2007. Chapter 1: From Colonization to Abolition - patterns of historical development in Brazil, Cuba, and the United States. The comparative histories of slavery in Brazil, Cuba, and the United States. Cambridge University. 1–32.
[21]
Bergad, L. 2007. Chapter 1: From Colonization to Abolition - patterns of historical development in Brazil, Cuba, and the United States. The comparative histories of slavery in Brazil, Cuba, and the United States. Cambridge University Press. 1–32.
[22]
Bethell, L. 1987. Colonial Brazil. Cambridge University Press.
[23]
Bethell, L. 1991. Mexico since independence. Cambridge University Press.
[24]
Bethell, L. ed. 1984. The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume 1: Colonial Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
[25]
Bethell, L. ed. 1984. The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume 1: Colonial Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
[26]
Bethell, L. ed. 1984. The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume 1: Colonial Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
[27]
Bethell, L. ed. 1984. The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume 1: Colonial Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
[28]
Bethell, L. ed. 1984. The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume 1: Colonial Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
[29]
Bethell, L. ed. 1984. The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume 2: Colonial Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
[30]
Bethell, L. ed. 1985. The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume 3: From Independence to c.1870. Cambridge University Press.
[31]
Bethell, L. ed. 1985. The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume 3: From Independence to c.1870. Cambridge University Press.
[32]
Bethell, L. 1987. The Independence of Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
[33]
Blanchard, P. 2002. The Language of Liberation: Slave Voices in the Wars of Independence. Hispanic American Historical Review. 82, 3 (2002), 499–524. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-82-3-499.
[34]
Bolívar, S. 1965. Carta de Jamaica = The Jamaica letter = Lettre à un habitant de La Jamaïque. Ediciones del Ministerio de Educación.
[35]
Boxer, C.R. 1969. The Portuguese seaborne empire, 1415-1825. Hutchinson.
[36]
Brian R. Hamnett 1997. Process and Pattern: A Re-Examination of the Ibero-American Independence Movements, 1808-1826. Journal of Latin American Studies. 29, 2 (1997), 279–328.
[37]
Bryant, S.K. 2004. Enslaved rebels, fugitives, and litigants: the resistance continuum in colonial quito. Colonial Latin American Review. 13, 1 (2004), 7–46. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/1060916042000210800.
[38]
Burkholder, M.A. and Johnson, L.L. 2010. Colonial Latin America. Oxford University Press.
[39]
Burkholder, M.A. and Johnson, L.L. 2010. Colonial Latin America. Oxford University Press.
[40]
Burkholder, M.A. and Johnson, L.L. 2001. Colonial Latin America. Oxford University Press.
[41]
Burkholder, M.A. and Johnson, L.L. 2010. Colonial Latin America. Oxford University Press.
[42]
Burns, E.B. 1980. The poverty of progress: Latin America in the nineteenth century. University of California Press.
[43]
Bushnell, D. 1999. Independence Compared: The Americas North and South. Independence and revolution in Spanish America: perspectives and problems. Institute of Latin American Studies. 69–83.
[44]
Chasteen, J.C. 2011. Born in blood and fire: a concise history of Latin America. W.W. Norton.
[45]
Chasteen, J.C. 2011. Born in blood and fire: a concise history of Latin America. W.W. Norton.
[46]
Columbus, C. 1893. Journal of Christopher Columbus (During his First Voyage, 1492–93): And Documents Relating the Voyages of John Cabot and Gaspar Corte Real. publisher not identified.
[47]
Conniff, M.L. 1982. Latin American populism in comparative perspective. University of New Mexico Press.
[48]
Conquest of Mexico Paintings - Exploring the Early Americas | Exhibitions: http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/exploring-the-early-americas/interactives/conquest-of-mexico-paintings/.
[49]
Conrad, R.E. 1983. Children of God’s fire: a documentary history of black slavery in Brazil. Princeton University Press.
[50]
Cope, R.D. 1994. The limits of racial domination: plebeian society in colonial Mexico City, 1660-1720. University of Wisconsin Press.
[51]
Corchado, A. 2013. Midnight in Mexico: a reporter’s journey through a country’s descent into the darkness. The Penguin Press.
[52]
Cortés, H. and Pagden, A. 1986. Letters from Mexico. Yale University Press.
[53]
Daniel H. Levine 1988. Assessing the Impacts of Liberation Theology in Latin America. The Review of Politics. 50, 2 (1988), 241–263.
[54]
Daniel James 1988. October 17th and 18th, 1945: Mass Protest, Peronism and the Argentine Working Class. Journal of Social History. 21, 3 (1988), 441–461.
[55]
David Pion-Berlin 1991. Between Confrontation and Accommodation: Military and Government Policy in Democratic Argentina. Journal of Latin American Studies. 23, 3 (1991), 543–571.
[56]
De la Fuente, A. 2000. Facundo and Chaco in Songs and Stories: Oral Culture and the Representations of Caudillos in the Nineteenth-Century Argentine Interior. Hispanic American Historical Review. 80, 3 (Jan. 2000), 503–535.
[57]
Di Tella, G. 1983. Argentina under Perón, 1973-76: the Nation’s experience with a labour-based government. Macmillan, in association with St Antony’s College, Oxford.
[58]
Dinges, J. 2005. The Condor years: how Pinochet and his allies brought terrorism to three continents. New Press.
[59]
Dore, E. et al. 1992. The red and the black: the Sandinistas and the Nicaraguan revolution. Institute of Latin American Studies.
[60]
E. P. Thompson 1971. The Moral Economy of the English Crowd in the Eighteenth Century. Past & Present. 50 (1971), 76–136.
[61]
Earle, R. 2005. Sobre Heroes y Tumbas: National Symbols in Nineteenth-Century Spanish America. Hispanic American Historical Review. 85, 3 (2005), 375–416. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-85-3-375.
[62]
Eckstein, S. 1989. Power and popular protest: Latin American social movements. University of California Press.
[63]
Edberg, M.C. 2001. Drug Traffickers as Social Bandits: Culture and Drug Trafficking in Northern Mexico and the Border Region. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice. 17, 3 (2001), 259–277. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/1043986201017003005.
[64]
Elliott, J.H. 1963. Imperial Spain: 1469-1716. Edward Arnold.
[65]
Elliott, J.H. 1987. The Spanish Conquest. Colonial Spanish America. Cambridge University Press. 1–58.
[66]
Forment, C.A. 2003. Democracy in Latin America, 1760-1900: Volume 1: Civic selfhood and public life in Mexico and Peru. University of Chicago Press.
[67]
Fowler, W. 2008. Latin America since 1780. Hodder Education.
[68]
Fowler, W. 2012. Malcontents, rebels, and pronunciados: the politics of insurrection in nineteenth-century Mexico. University of Nebraska Press.
[69]
Francisco E. Thoumi 1992. Why the Illegal Psychoactive Drugs Industry Grew in Colombia. Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs. 34, 3 (1992), 37–63.
[70]
Frank Safford 1992. The Problem of Political Order in Early Republican Spanish America. Journal of Latin American Studies. 24, (1992), 83–97.
[71]
Fraser, N. and Navarro, M. 1985. Eva Perón. W. W. Norton.
[72]
Friedman, T.L. How Mexico Got Back in the Game.
[73]
Friedman, T.L. Is Mexico the Comeback Kid?
[74]
Fuentes, C. 1999. The buried mirror: reflections on Spain and the New World. Houghton Mifflin.
[75]
Fuentes, C. 2005. The death of Artemio Cruz. Rosetta.
[76]
Full discussion of the 1494 Columbus letter: http://oshermaps.org/.
[77]
Galeano, E. 1997. The Contemporary Structure of Plunder. Open veins of Latin America: five centuries of the pillage of a continent. Monthly Review Press. 205–261.
[78]
García Márquez, G. and Rabassa, G. 2014. One hundred years of solitude. Viking.
[79]
Garretón Merino, M.A. and Newman, E. 2001. Democracy in Latin America: (re)constructing political society. United Nations University Press.
[80]
Gilbert, D. 1988. Sandinistas: the party and the revolution. Basil Blackwell.
[81]
Gootenberg, P. 1999. Cocaine: global histories. Routledge.
[82]
Gossen, G.H. and León Portilla, M. 1993. South and Meso-American native spirituality: from the cult of the feathered serpent to the theology of liberation. Crossroad.
[83]
Graham, R. 1994. Independence in Latin America: a comparative approach. McGraw-Hill.
[84]
Grandin, G. 2007. Empire’s workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the rise of the new imperialism. Owl Books.
[85]
Grandin, G. 2007. Going Primitive: The Violence of the New Imperialism. Empire’s workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the rise of the new imperialism. Owl Books.
[86]
Grandin, G. 2004. The last colonial massacre: Latin America in the Cold War. University of Chicago Press.
[87]
Grandin, G. 2004. The last colonial massacre: Latin America in the Cold War. University of Chicago Press.
[88]
Grandin, G. and Joseph, G.M. 2010. A century of revolution: insurgent and counterinsurgent violence during Latin America’s long cold war. Duke University Press.
[89]
Grillo, I. 2012. El Narco: inside Mexico’s criminal insurgency. Bloomsbury Press.
[90]
Grillo, I. 2012. El Narco: the bloody rise of Mexican drug cartels. Bloomsbury.
[91]
Guardino, P.F. 1996. Peasants, politics, and the formation of Mexico’s national state: Guerrero, 1800-1857. Stanford University Press.
[92]
Guerra, L. 2009. ‘To condemn the Revolution is to condemn Christ’: Radicalization, Moral Redemption, and the Sacrifice of Civil Society in Cuba, 1960. Hispanic American Historical Review. 89, 1 (2009), 73–109. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-2008-045.
[93]
Gutiérrez, G. et al. 1974. A theology of liberation: history, politics and salvation. S.C.M. Press.
[94]
Guy, D.J. 2009. Women build the welfare state: performing charity and creating rights in Argentina, 1880-1955. Duke University Press.
[95]
Guy P. C. Thomson 1990. Bulwarks of Patriotic Liberalism: The National Guard, Philharmonic Corps and Patriotic Juntas in Mexico, 1847-88. Journal of Latin American Studies. 22, 1 (1990), 31–68.
[96]
Guy P. C. Thomson 1991. Popular Aspects of Liberalism in Mexico, 1848-1888. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 10, 3 (1991), 265–292.
[97]
Guy P. C. Thomson 1991. Popular Aspects of Liberalism in Mexico, 1848-1888. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 10, 3 (1991), 265–292.
[98]
Hancox, D. Why Ernesto Laclau is the intellectual figurehead for Syriza and Podemos | Dan Hancox | Opinion | The Guardian.
[99]
Hassig, R. 1994. Mexico and the Spanish conquest. Longman.
[100]
Helg, A. 1999. The limits of equality: Free people of colour and slaves during the first independence of Cartagena, Colombia, 1810–15. Slavery & Abolition. 20, 2 (1999), 1–30. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/01440399908575275.
[101]
Hilda Sabato 2001. On Political Citizenship in Nineteenth-Century Latin America. The American Historical Review. 106, 4 (2001), 1290–1315.
[102]
"History will absolve me,” defence speech: https://www.marxists.org/history/cuba/archive/castro/.
[103]
Hönnighausen, L. et al. 1993. Rewriting the South: history and fiction. Francke.
[104]
Inga Clendinnen 1991. ‘Fierce and Unnatural Cruelty’: Cortés and the Conquest of Mexico. Representations. 33 (1991), 65–100.
[105]
J. H. Elliott 1967. The Mental World of Hernán Cortés. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 17, (1967), 41–58.
[106]
J. Patrice McSherry 2002. Tracking the Origins of a State Terror Network: Operation Condor. Latin American Perspectives. 29, 1 (2002), 38–60.
[107]
Jacobsen, N. and Aljovín de Losada, C. 2005. Political cultures in the Andes, 1750-1950. Duke University Press.
[108]
James E. Sanders 2009. Atlantic Republicanism in Nineteenth-Century Colombia: Spanish America’s Challenge to the Contours of Atlantic History. Journal of World History. 20, 1 (2009), 131–150.
[109]
James E. Sanders 2009. Atlantic Republicanism in Nineteenth-Century Colombia: Spanish America’s Challenge to the Contours of Atlantic History. Journal of World History. 20, 1 (2009), 131–150.
[110]
Janice E. Perlman 2006. The Metamorphosis of Marginality: Four Generations in the Favelas of Rio de Janeiro. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 606, (2006), 154–177.
[111]
Jaquette, J.S. 2009. Feminist agendas and democracy in Latin America. Duke University Press.
[112]
Jeremy Adelman 2008. An Age of Imperial Revolutions. The American Historical Review. 113, 2 (2008), 319–340.
[113]
Joel Wolfe 1994. Guest Editor’s Introduction: Getúlio Vargas and His Enduring Legacy for Brazil. Luso-Brazilian Review. 31, 2 (1994), 1–3.
[114]
John Tutino 1998. The Revolution in Mexican Independence: Insurgency and the Renegotiation of Property, Production, and Patriarchy in the Bajío, 1800-1855. The Hispanic American Historical Review. 78, 3 (1998), 367–418.
[115]
Joseph, G.M. and Spenser, D. 2008. In from the cold: Latin America’s new encounter with the Cold War. Duke University Press.
[116]
Juliet Hooker 2005. Indigenous Inclusion/Black Exclusion: Race, Ethnicity and Multicultural Citizenship in Latin America. Journal of Latin American Studies. 37, 2 (2005), 285–310.
[117]
Kamen, H. 1983. Spain 1469-1714: a society of conflict. Longman.
[118]
Kapcia, A. 2000. Cuba: island of dreams. Berg.
[119]
Katzew, I. et al. 2011. Contested visions in the Spanish colonial world. Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
[120]
Keen, B. 2000. Argentina: The Struggle for Democracy, 1890-1994. Latin American civilization: history and society, 1492 to the present. Westview. 338–362.
[121]
Keen, B. 2000. Chapter 6: Government and Church in the Spanish Indies. Latin American civilization: history and society, 1492 to the present. Westview. 95–112.
[122]
Keen, B. 2000. Chapter 17 ‘The Mexican Revolution’. Latin American civilization: history and society, 1492 to the present. Westview. 315–337.
[123]
Keen, B. 1996. Latin American civilization: history and society, 1492 to the present. Westview Press.
[124]
Keen, B. 2000. Latin American civilization: history and society, 1492 to the present. Westview.
[125]
Klein, H.S. and Luna, F.V. 2009. Slavery in Brazil. Cambridge University Press.
[126]
Klein, H.S. and Luna, F.V. 2010. Slavery in Brazil. Cambridge University Press.
[127]
Knight, A. 1986. The Mexican revolution. Cambridge University Press.
[128]
Koonings, K. and Kruijt, D. 2007. Fractured cities: social exclusion, urban violence and contested spaces in Latin America. Zed Books.
[129]
Kornbluh, P. 2004. The Pinochet file: a declassified dossier on atrocity and accountability. New Press.
[130]
Kurt Weyland 2004. Neoliberalism and Democracy in Latin America: A Mixed Record. Latin American Politics and Society. 46, 1 (2004), 135–157.
[131]
LaFeber, W. 1993. Inevitable revolutions: the United States in Central America. W.W. Norton.
[132]
Landers, J. and Robinson, B. eds. 2006. Slaves, subjects, and subversives: blacks in colonial Latin America. University of New Mexico Press.
[133]
Lane, K. 2005. Africans and Natives in the Mines of Latin America. Beyond black and red: African-native relations in colonial Latin America. University of New Mexico Press.
[134]
Lara, J. 2008. Christian texts for Aztecs: art and liturgy in colonial Mexico. University of Notre Dame Press.
[135]
Leandro Vergara-Camus 2009. The Politics of the MST: Autonomous Rural Communities, the State, and Electoral Politics. Latin American Perspectives. 36, 4 (2009), 178–191.
[136]
Lecture: https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/history/students/modules/hi115/topics/w18/revolutionary_latin_america_full_lecture_text_only.pptx.
[137]
León Portilla, M. et al. 2006. The broken spears: the Aztec account of the Conquest of Mexico. Beacon Press.
[138]
Levine, R.M. 1998. Chapter 3: The Estado Novo, 1937-1945. Father of the poor?: Vargas and his era. Cambridge University Press. 50–74.
[139]
Levine, R.M. and Crocitti, J.J. 1999. The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Duke University Press.
[140]
Levine, R.M. and Crocitti, J.J. 1999. The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Duke University Press.
[141]
Levine, R.M. and Crocitti, J.J. 1999. The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Duke University Press.
[142]
Levine, R.M. and Crocitti, J.J. 1999. The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Duke University Press.
[143]
Levine, R.M. and Crocitti, J.J. 1999. The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Duke University Press.
[144]
Lewis, O. 1976. Five families: Mexican case studies in the culture of poverty. Souvenir Press.
[145]
Lewis, O. 1964. The children of Sańchez: autobiography of a Mexican family. Penguin Books.
[146]
Lewis, O. 1962. The children of Sanchez: autobiography of a Mexican family. Secker & Warburg.
[147]
Lockhart, J. and Schwartz, S.B. 1983. Early Latin America: a history of Colonial Spanish America and Brazil. Cambridge University Press.
[148]
Lomnitz, L.A. de and Lomnitz, G. 1977. Networks and marginality: life in a Mexican shanty town. Academic Press.
[149]
Louis A. Pérez Jr. 2002. Fear and Loathing of Fidel Castro: Sources of US Policy toward Cuba. Journal of Latin American Studies. 34, 2 (2002), 227–254.
[150]
Lynch, J. 1986. The Spanish American Revolutions 1808-1826. Norton.
[151]
Lynch, J. 1973. The Spanish American revolutions, 1808-1826. Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
[152]
Mallon, F.E. 1995. Peasant and nation: the making of postcolonial Mexico and Peru. University of California Press.
[153]
Manuel Antonio Garreton M. 1994. Human Rights in Processes of Democratisation. Journal of Latin American Studies. 26, 1 (1994), 221–234.
[154]
María Elena Martínez 2004. The Black Blood of New Spain: Limpieza de Sangre, Racial Violence, and Gendered Power in Early Colonial Mexico. The William and Mary Quarterly. 61, 3 (2004), 479–520.
[155]
Mark Thurner 1995. ‘Republicanos’ and ‘La Comunidad de Peruanos’: Unimagined Political Communities in Postcolonial Andean Peru. Journal of Latin American Studies. 27, 2 (1995), 291–318.
[156]
Marti, J. 5AD. Our America. (5AD).
[157]
Matthew, L.E. and Oudijk, M.R. 2007. Indian conquistadors: indigenous allies in the conquest of Mesoamerica. University of Oklahoma Press.
[158]
Matthew Restall 2000. Black Conquistadors: Armed Africans in Early Spanish America. The Americas. 57, 2 (2000), 171–205.
[159]
McCrossen, A. 2009. Land of necessity: consumer culture in the United States-Mexico borderlands. Duke University Press.
[160]
McKnight, K.J. and Garofalo, L. 2009. Afro-Latino voices: narratives from the early modern Ibero-Atlantic world, 1550-1812. Hackett Pub.
[161]
McSherry, J.P. 2005. Predatory states: Operation Condor and covert war in Latin America. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
[162]
Medieval Sourcebook: Christopher Columbus: Extracts from Journal: http://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/columbus1.asp.
[163]
Menchú, R. et al. 1984. I, Rigoberta Menchú: an Indianwoman in Guatemala. Verso.
[164]
Menchú, R. and Burgos-Debray, E. 2009. I, Rigoberta Menchú: an Indian woman in Guatemala. Verso.
[165]
Méndez G., C. 2005. The plebeian republic: the Huanta rebellion and the making of the Peruvian state, 1820-1850. Duke University Press.
[166]
Mercille, J. 2011. Violent Narco-Cartels or US Hegemony? The political economy of the ‘war on drugs’ in Mexico. Third World Quarterly. 32, 9 (2011), 1637–1653. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2011.619881.
[167]
Metcalf, A. 2002. Chapter 4: Domingos Fernandes Nobre, ‘Tomacauna,’ a Go-Between in Sixteenth-Century Brazil. The human tradition in colonial Latin America. Scholarly Resources. 51–63.
[168]
Metcalf, A.C. 1992. Family and frontier in colonial Brazil: Santana de Parnaíba, 1580-1822. University of California Press.
[169]
Michael T. Ducey 1999. Village, Nation, and Constitution: Insurgent Politics in Papantla, Veracruz, 1810-1821. The Hispanic American Historical Review. 79, 3 (1999), 463–493.
[170]
Michel Agier 1995. Racism, Culture and Black Identity in Brazil. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 14, 3 (1995), 245–264.
[171]
Miguel Teubal and Mariana Ortega Breña 2009. Agrarian Reform and Social Movements in the Age of Globalization: Latin America at the Dawn of the Twenty-first Century. Latin American Perspectives. 36, 4 (2009), 9–20.
[172]
Milanesio, N. 2013. Workers go shopping in Argentina: the rise of popular consumer culture. University of New Mexico.
[173]
Mills, K.R. and Taylor, W.B. 1998. Colonial Spanish America: a documentary history. Scholarly Resources.
[174]
Mills, K.R. and Taylor, W.B. 1998. Colonial Spanish America: a documentary history. Scholarly Resources.
[175]
Monroe Doctrine: Primary Documents of American History (Virtual Programs & Services, Library of Congress): 1823. http://www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/ourdocs/Monroe.html.
[176]
Montero, A.P. et al. 2004. Decentralization and democracy in Latin America. University of Notre Dame Press.
[177]
Moreno, J. 2003. Yankee don’t go home!: Mexican nationalism, American business culture, and the shaping of modern Mexico, 1920-1950. University of North Carolina Press.
[178]
Movimento dos Trabalhadores sem Terra, Landless Workers’ Movement [version in English]: http://www.mstbrazil.org/.
[179]
National Security Archive: Guatemala and Antiterrorismo (Document 8): http://nsarchive.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB32/vol2_espanol.html.
[180]
O’Donnell, G.A. et al. 1986. Transitions from authoritarian rule: Latin America. Johns Hopkins University Press.
[181]
Orin Starn 1995. Maoism in the Andes: The Communist Party of Peru-Shining Path and the Refusal of History. Journal of Latin American Studies. 27, 2 (1995), 399–421.
[182]
Oscar Lewis 1952. Urbanization without Breakdown: A Case Study. The Scientific Monthly. 75, 1 (1952), 31–41.
[183]
Ouweneel, A. and Miller, S. 1990. The Indian community of colonial Mexico: fifteen essays on land tenure, corporate organizations, ideology and village politics. Centrum voor Studie en Documentatie van Latijns Amerika.
[184]
Owensby, B.P. 2008. Empire of law and Indian justice in colonial Mexico. Stanford University Press.
[185]
Pastor, R.A. 1992. Whirlpool: U.S. foreign policy toward Latin America and the Caribbean. Princeton University Press.
[186]
Pastor, R.A. and Pastor, R.A. 2001. Exiting the whirlpool: U.S. foreign policy toward Latin America and the Caribbean. Westview Press.
[187]
Pearce, J. and Latin America Bureau 1981. Under the eagle: U.S. intervention in Central America and the Caribbean. Latin America Bureau.
[188]
Peeler, J.A. 2009. Building democracy in Latin America. Rienner.
[189]
Perlman, J.E. 1976. The myth of marginality: urban poverty and politics in Rio de Janeiro. University of California Press.
[190]
Peter Guardino 1995. Barbarism or Republican Law? Guerrero’s Peasants and National Politics, 1820-1846. The Hispanic American Historical Review. 75, 2 (1995), 185–213.
[191]
Peter Guardino 1995. Barbarism or Republican Law? Guerrero’s Peasants and National Politics, 1820-1846. The Hispanic American Historical Review. 75, 2 (1995), 185–213.
[192]
Peter Guardino 1995. Barbarism or Republican Law? Guerrero’s Peasants and National Politics, 1820-1846. The Hispanic American Historical Review. 75, 2 (1995), 185–213.
[193]
Philip Oxhorn 1994. Understanding Political Change after Authoritarian Rule: The Popular Sectors and Chile’s New Democratic Regime. Journal of Latin American Studies. 26, 3 (1994), 737–759.
[194]
Pike, F.B. and Stritch, T. 1974. The new corporatism: social-political structures in the Iberian world. University of Notre Dame Press.
[195]
Plan de Ayala: http://www.hist.umn.edu/~rmccaa/la20c/ayala.htm.
[196]
Plotkin, M.B. 2003. Mañana es San Perón: a cultural history of Peron’s Argentina. Scholarly Resources.
[197]
RACE: The Power of an Illusion | PBS: http://www.pbs.org/race/000_General/000_00-Home.htm.
[198]
Rebecca Earle 2002. 'Padres de la Patria" and the Ancestral Past: Commemorations of Independence in Nineteenth-Century Spanish America. Journal of Latin American Studies. 34, 4 (2002), 775–805.
[199]
Rebecca J. Scott 1994. Defining the Boundaries of Freedom in the World of Cane: Cuba, Brazil, and Louisiana after Emancipation. The American Historical Review. 99, 1 (1994), 70–102.
[200]
Restall, M. 2012. The New Conquest History. History Compass. 10, 2 (Feb. 2012), 151–160. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1478-0542.2011.00822.x.
[201]
Review by: Alberto Ciria 1983. Review: Flesh and Fantasy: The Many Faces of Evita (and Juan Peron). Latin American Research Review. 18, 2 (1983), 150–165.
[202]
Rodríguez O., J.E. 1998. The independence of Spanish America. Cambridge University Press.
[203]
Rosendahl, M. 1997. Inside the revolution: everyday life in socialist Cuba. Cornell University Press.
[204]
Rowland, C. 2007. The Cambridge companion to liberation theology. Cambridge University Press.
[205]
Rugeley, T. 1996. Yucatán’s Maya peasantry and the origins of the Caste War. University of Texas Press.
[206]
Sábato, E.R. 1990. On heroes and tombs. Cape.
[207]
Salomon, F. and Schwartz, S.B. 1999. The Cambridge history of the native peoples of the Americas: Vol.3 Part 2 : South America. Cambridge University Press.
[208]
Sanders, J.E. 2004. ‘Citizens of a Free People’: Popular Liberalism and Race in Nineteenth-Century Southwestern Colombia. Hispanic American Historical Review. 84, 2 (2004), 277–314. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-84-2-277.
[209]
Sandra Aguilar-Rodríguez 2007. Cooking Modernity: Nutrition Policies, Class, and Gender in 1940s and 1950s Mexico City. The Americas. 64, 2 (2007), 177–205.
[210]
Sarmiento, D.F. 1972. Life in the Argentine Republic in the days of the tyrants: or, civilization and barbarism. Hafner Publishing.
[211]
Sarmiento, D.F. and Mann, M. 1961. Life in the Argentine Republic in the days of the tyrants, or, Civilization and barbarism. Collier Books.
[212]
Schmidt-Nowara, C. 2011. Slavery, freedom, and abolition in Latin America and the Atlantic world. University of New Mexico Press.
[213]
Schroeder, M. 1998. The Sandino Rebellion Revisited: Civil War, Imperialism, Popular Nationalism, and State Formation Muddied Up Together in the Segovias of Nicaragua, 1926-1934. Close encounters of empire: writing the cultural history of U.S.-Latin American relations. Duke University Press.
[214]
Schwartz, S.B. 1984. Colonial Brasil, c.1580- c.1750: plantations and peripheries. The Cambridge history of Latin America. Cambridge University Press. 422–499.
[215]
Schwartz, S.B. 2003. Resistance and Accommodation in Eighteenth-Century Brazil: The Slaves’ view of Slavery. The slavery reader. Routledge. 626–634.
[216]
Schwartz, S.B. 1985. Sugar plantations in the formation of Brazilian society: Bahia, 1550-1835. Cambridge University Press.
[217]
Schwartz, S.B. 1985. Sugar plantations in the formation of Brazilian society: Bahia, 1550-1835. Cambridge University Press.
[218]
SCORER, J. 2008. From la guerra sucia to ‘A Gentleman’s Fight’: War, Disappearance and Nation in the 1976–1983 Argentine Dictatorship. Bulletin of Latin American Research. 27, 1 (2008), 43–60. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1470-9856.2007.00256.x.
[219]
Scott, P.D. and Marshall, J. 1991. Cocaine politics: drugs, armies, and the CIA in Central America. University of California Press.
[220]
Scott, R.J. 1985. Slave emancipation in Cuba: the transition to free labor, 1860-1899. Princeton University Press.
[221]
Several Authors 1999. Slavery and Its Aftermath/various articles (Part III). The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. Latin America Bureau. 125–147.
[222]
Silva, B. da et al. 1997. Benedita da Silva: an Afro-Brazilian woman’s story of politics and love. Institute for Food and Development Policy.
[223]
Skidmore, T. 1999. World War I, the Great Depression, and Dictatorship. Brazil: five centuries of change. Oxford University Press. 93–125.
[224]
Smith, B.T. Mexico On the Brink.
[225]
Smith, P. 1974. Political Legitimacy in Spanish America. New approaches to Latin American history. University of Texas Press. 225–255.
[226]
Smith, P.H. 1996. Talons of the eagle: dynamics of U.S.-Latin American relations. Oxford University Press.
[227]
Spalding, K. 1984. Huarochirí: an Andean society under Inca and Spanish rule. Stanford University Press.
[228]
Starn, O. et al. 1995. The Peru reader: history, culture, politics. Duke University Press.
[229]
Stein, S.J. and Stein, B.H. 1970. The colonial heritage of Latin America: essays on economic dependence in perspective. Oxford University Press.
[230]
Stephen, L. 1997. Women and social movements in Latin America: power from below. University of Texas Press.
[231]
Stern, S.J. 1987. Resistance, rebellion, and consciousness in the Andean peasant world, 18th to 20th centuries. University of Wisconsin.
[232]
Stern, S.J. 1998. Shining and other paths: war and society in Peru, 1980-1995. Duke Univeristy Press.
[233]
Streatfeild, D. 2003. Cocaine: an unauthorized biography. Picador.
[234]
Stuart B. Schwartz 1974. The Manumission of Slaves in Colonial Brazil: Bahia, 1684-1745. The Hispanic American Historical Review. 54, 4 (1974), 603–635.
[235]
Symcox, G. and Sullivan, B. 2005. Christopher Columbus and the Enterprise of the Indies: a brief history with documents. Palgrave Macmillan.
[236]
Szuchman, M.D. and Hidden engines of change: values and attitudes in Latin American history (Conference) 1989. The Middle period in Latin America: values and attitudes in the 17th-19th centuries. Rienner.
[237]
Taussig, M.T. 2005. Law in a lawless land: diary of a ‘limpieza’ in Colombia. University of Chicago Press.
[238]
Terry Rugeley 1997. Rural Political Violence and the Origins of the Caste War. The Americas. 53, 4 (1997), 469–496.
[239]
The Log of Christopher Columbus: http://www.christopher-columbus.eu/logs.htm.
[240]
Thoumi, F.E. 2003. Illegal drugs, economy and society in the Andes. Woodrow Wilson Center Press.
[241]
Tombs, D. 2002. Latin American liberation theology. Brill Academic Publishers.
[242]
Townsend, C. 1998. ‘Half My Body Free, the Other Half Enslaved’: The Politics of the Slaves of Guayaquil at the End of the Colonial Era. Colonial Latin American Review. 7, 1 (1998), 105–128. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/10609169885034.
[243]
Tulio Halperin Donghi 1992. Backward Looks and Forward Glimpses from a Quincentennial Vantage Point. Journal of Latin American Studies. 24, (1992), 219–234.
[244]
Van Cott, D.L. 2005. From movements to parties in Latin America: the evolution of ethnic politics. Cambridge University Press.
[245]
Viqueira Albán, J.P. et al. 1999. Propriety and permissiveness in Bourbon Mexico. Scholarly Resources.
[246]
Ward Stavig 1988. Ethnic Conflict, Moral Economy, and Population in Rural Cuzco on the Eve of the Thupa Amaro II Rebellion. The Hispanic American Historical Review. 68, 4 (1988), 737–770.
[247]
Williamson, E. 2009. The Penguin history of Latin America. Penguin.
[248]
Williamson, E. 2009. The Penguin history of Latin America. Penguin.
[249]
Williamson, E. 2009. The Penguin history of Latin America. Penguin.
[250]
Wolfe, J. 2010. Autos and progress: the Brazilian search for modernity. Oxford University Press.
[251]
Zabludoff, S. 1997. Colombian Narcotics Organizations as Business Enterprises. Transnational Organized Crime. 3, 2 (1997), 20–49.
[252]
2001. Ambivalent Argentina: Nationalism, Exoticism, and Latin Americanism at the 1889 Paris Universal Exposition. Nepantla: Views from South. 2, 1 (Jan. 2001), 115–139.
[253]
Convicted of DEA Agent’s Murder Caro Quintero Ordered Released.
[254]
27AD. In Our Time, The Siege of Tenochtitlan (45 minutes). BBC Radio 4.
[255]
National Security Archive: Memorandum on Torture and Disappearance in Argentina.
[256]
25AD. Race - the Power of an Illusion.