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DESCRIPTION & APPROACH


Latin America is a complex region, filled with contrasts, failures and possibilities–and more than anything a heterogeneous population with deep-rooted traditions. Its many countries share common roots in the Portuguese and Spanish Empires created in the sixteenth century and their conquest of and domination over people of Indigenous adn African descent. But these countries have followed at times parallel and at times divergent paths since then. Cultural origins and language unite the region. National histories, nationalism and regionalism and heterogeneous local experiences separate it into parts. This course assumes that a historical studies need to form part of any multi-disciplinary examination of Latin American culture, politics, and society. It will cover about 24 distinct and relatively self-contained themes drawn from many different disciplines, some of which will be presented by other faculty in the Latin American and Latino Studies Program. Readings will be drawn mostly from anthology chapters or articles (not monographs) in order to assure a complete introduction to a specific theme or question. This course will not be based on lectures but on close, intensive discussion of materials including films, readings, web pages, etc.

 

GOALS


Students will come out of the course with a strong sense of the many research and policy agendas and should be able to pass to more advanced courses on the region with ease. Besides the timely completion of readings students will have to complete a series of research projects that will allow them to pursue their specific interests within our discussion of given questions.

 

REQUIREMENTS


Your participation in this class constitutes a contract between us. I expect a reasonable degree of enthusiasm and interest from you. You will have to complete all requirements in order to receive a grade in this course. I expect you to come to all class sessions and be on time. I expect all students to participate in debates and discussions, and to feel free to bring in any additional materials, sources, or questions to class meetings.

You will have to work very hard to complete the requirements for this course—between 5 and 10 hours a week outside of class time. The assigned readings are very reasonable, no more than 40 pages per class meeting. But you will have to juggle other ongoing projects during the semester. The benefit is that at the end, after the last day of classes, you will be done with all your work for this course (unless you have failed to hand in some work).

  • Determination of Grade: 
    • (20% each) 3 short research and discussion papers (5-6 pages)
    • (15%) One in-depth advanced monograph review (5 pages, rough and final drafts due)
    • (20%) Class participation, attendance, and short assignments
    • (5%) LALS Program event attendance and participation (2)
    • In the calculation of the final grade of borderline cases, improvement and dynamic class participation will be decisive factors. I consider all students equally capable of successfully completing the requirements for this class with an above average grade, which does not mean you will receive a B for mediocre work.
  • Participation:
    • Your participation in class activities, including attendance, will be an important component of your final grade. The short assignments that form part of the participation grade include short response papers. They should be about one page long and reflect some thinking, coherent questioning, analysis or reflections upon some aspect of that week’s readings.
  • Research and Discussion Papers:
    • Students will carry out three distinct research and writing exercises during the semester. I will provide the broad themes and you will carry out independent research and write a brief report on your findings.
    • Students will pick one country and combine critically selected web-based sources with 2-3 scholarly articles and 1-2 journalistic articles.
    • Each project will involve student’s discussing one particular “micro-problem” within the parameters given by the theme for each project.
  • Web Content:
    • Approximately every other week there will be some assigned web-based materials either from our campus intranet or from the web itself. Some of these materials will be presented in class but others will be for your own individual browsing. These materials are as essential to the course as any other assigned reading.
  • Blackboard:
    • We will be using blackboard to submit written work and manage your grades.
  • E-RES system:
    • We will use the E-RES system for many online reserve readings—make sure you are familiar with it. The password for this course is caliban.

You should check this web page at least once a week for revisions and the posting of assignments. Bring your readings to class when they are being discussed. Pick one country on which you want to focus your work and read up on weekly news.

 

BOOKS REQUIRED FOR THIS COURSE


The following books are available at the bookstore. Other readings not ordered by the bookstore will be made available on reserve.

  • NACLA. Report on the Americas: The paradoxes of racial politics.
    • We will purchase two issues of this magazine. $4 each
  • Susan Eva Eckstein & Timothy P. Wickham-Crowley, Eds., Struggles for Social Rights in Latin America. Routledge. 2002.
  • Eduardo Galeano. Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent.Monthly Review Press.

 

COURSE ORGANIZATION AND SCHEDULE


Sep 4 (Th) What is Latin America – A Quantitative and Geographical look

Sep 9 (Tu) What is Latin America-A Cultural and Historical Look

Sep 11 ( Th) Colonial Legacies: Indigenous Writing of the Americas (Prof. Cynthia Stone)

Sep 16 (Tu) Missed Class

Sep 18 (Th) Colonial Legacies: Slavery of Africans and the Creation of Indians

Sep 23 (Tu) The Formation of the Nation-State

Sep 25 (Th) Labor and popular struggles

Sep 30 (Tu) The Military, Repression and Authoritarian States

Oct 2 (Th) Revolutions, Revolts, and other Popular Mobilizations

Oct 7 (Tu) Truth Commissions, Human Rights and Justice

Oct 9 (Th) The US and Latin America before 1960

Oct 16 (Th) The Expansion, Crisis and Diversification of Export Economies, 1860-1960

Oct 21 (Tu) Neoliberalism, Globalization and Standards of Living

  • Struggles for Social Rights in Latin America. Chaps. 4 and 5.

Oct 23 (Th) Country Case Study: The Argentine Economic Collapse and its effects

  • Reading: Photocopied packet from press
  • Oct 27 (Monday) Second Project due via blackboard dropbox or email attachment

Oct 28 (Tu) Left and neo-populist electoral politics

Oct 30 (Th) Social Movements and Democratization (Prof. Maria Rodrigues)

Nov 4 (Tu) Indigenous people’s Identity and Movements

  • Struggles for Social Rights in Latin America, Ch. 12.
  • Select one:
    • Las Americas, Chap. 21 (Gould)
    • Las Americas, Chap. 7 (Edelman)

Nov 6 (Th) Women and Gender

  • Struggles for Social Rights in Latin America, Chap. 8

Nov 11 (Tu) Violence and Urban Life (Prof. Daniel Goldstein)

Nov 13 (Th) Country Case Study: Cuba and its Revolution I

Nov 18 (Tu) Country Case Study: Cuba and its Revolution II

Nov 20 (Th) The Cuban Literature since the Revolution (Prof. Isabel Alvarez Borland)

Nov 25 (Tu) Country Case Study: Neo-colonialism in Puerto Rico

Dec 2 (Tu) US Power in Latin America of late

  • Select one of the following:
    • Roberto Steiner. “Hooked on Drugs: Colombian-US Relations.” The United States and Latin America: The New Agenda.
    • Eduardo A. Gamarra. “The United States and Bolivia: Fighting the Drug War.” The United States and Latin America: The New Agenda.

Dec 4 (Th) Country Case Study: El Salvador during the 1990s

  • Films: Romero or Salvador, Scheduled screening or on reserve at MRC.
  • Reading: Photocopied materials

Dec 9 (Tu) Concluding Discussion

  • Your monograph review (2-3 pages) is due on Monday, December 1
  • A reflection (2 pages) on how Galeano’s Open Veins connects with our course readings and discussions is due Dec 10.