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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2017) 97 (3): 558–560.
Published: 01 August 2017
...Paul Gillingham Regrettably, The Man Who Wrote Pancho Villa does not go much beyond the artifices and shrewd politics of this self-presentation, and Cifuentes-Goodbody's second promise—that we will learn something about an entire generation of Mexican intellectuals and “the much larger...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2011) 91 (4): 665–689.
Published: 01 November 2011
...Kathryn Burns Abstract We are rapidly revising Angel Rama’s concept of the “lettered city” ( la ciudad letrada ) to include indigenous writers and their texts. So far, however, Andeanists have focused mainly on those who wrote in Quechua or used quipu , a distinctively Andean form of record keeping...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2003) 83 (2): 410–411.
Published: 01 May 2003
... Here and There in Mexico presents the travel experiences of Mary Ashley Townsend as she wrote them around 1900. She conceived the book as a composite description of several trips to Mexico taken over a number of years. The writings were uncovered and sparsely edited by respected historian Ralph Lee...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1966) 46 (4): 409–428.
Published: 01 November 1966
... Cristoforo Colombo . 6 Cioranescu believes that Ferdinand probably wrote some of the Historie , but that what has come down to us is, in reality, part of a first draft version of Bartolomé de Las Casas’ Historia, de las Indias . This Las Casas version, according to the author, descended into the hands...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1968) 48 (1): 19–36.
Published: 01 February 1968
..., a militant Hispanist, saw “neither justice nor utility” in obligatory instruction. The nation’s Indians, being “impervious to all civilization,” constituted an “insuperable obstacle” to universal education. Indians, he wrote, regarded their sons as beasts of burden and would resist all efforts to make them...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2002) 82 (4): 755–759.
Published: 01 November 2002
... was his joy; it was an essential dimension of the world he inhabited and he wrote beautifully with great insight, verve and care in a prose that is a delight to read. Michael submitted the book to Duke University Press in September 2000, just as he came up for tenure at Pittsburgh, hardly a month before...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2004) 84 (1): 117–120.
Published: 01 February 2004
...–Madison in 1970, 1979, 1982, and 1985. It was at Madison that Collier wrote The Life, Music, and Times of Carlos Gardel (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1986). He collected tango records starting with his first visit to Latin America, and tango music became an enduring passion. He wrote numerous...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1967) 47 (1): 98–99.
Published: 01 February 1967
... in Havana in 1813 and reprinted in 1876. The author originally planned a two-volume work, but the second, a description of Cuba’s economy and geography, was lost before publication. Valdés was born in Matanzas, Cuba in 1780. While in Cuba he founded a primary school, wrote an elementary grammar and his...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1979) 59 (1): 185.
Published: 01 February 1979
... nineteenth-century relative named Immanuel Guttentag, who had a small publishing house in Prussia but who wrote nothing about Bolivia! Included too are Max Uhel, a respected Tiahuanacunist of the nineteenth century, and Hans-Jurgen Puhle, who, in 1973, wrote a celebrated study of Bolivian land tenure...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2000) 80 (4): 951–960.
Published: 01 November 2000
... delivered to Johns Hopkins University Press the manuscript of his The Church Militant and Iberian Expansion, 1440–1770 . In November he wrote that “everything else must go out of the window, to be postponed until 1977,” and he noted his struggle “against those great gluttons, time and Christmas” (letter...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1983) 63 (1): 37–64.
Published: 01 February 1983
... himself to accept what had occurred. The hope of Colombian reunification remained: if necessary, he was prepared to use force to bring it about. “If they give me an army, I shall accept it,” he wrote from Cartagena in September 1830. “If they send me to Venezuela, I shall go.” 147 But to Santa Cruz...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1978) 58 (1): 111–112.
Published: 01 February 1978
... documentos para la historia de Costa Rica . Only the first three volumes of the Colección appeared (1881-1883) before he wrote his Historia , although his own selection of documents published afterward provided him with much data. He also used the first of eight volumes of documents collected by Manuel...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1979) 59 (1): 186.
Published: 01 February 1979
... work on the famous Mexican anarchist. The first 68 pages consist of a three-chapter essay by B. Cano Ruiz, preceded by a very short editorial introduction. The other 152 pages comprise forty-two letters Ricardo Flores Magón wrote in 1920-1922 to Ellen White, a youthful idealistic American admirer...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1965) 45 (1): 88–98.
Published: 01 February 1965
... in Caracas ? Very few of the leading patriots in Spanish America kept diaries during the struggle for independence. Years later some of them wrote recuerdos or memorias but these lack the freshness, spontaneity, and veracity found in the writings of a participant who records the hopes and fears...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1962) 42 (2): 199–211.
Published: 01 May 1962
... trade was summarized by the Brazilian minister in London who wrote in 1854, that “the commerce between the two countries is carried on with English capital, on English ships, by English companies. The profits . . . the interest on capital . . . the payments for insurance, the commissions...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1982) 62 (2): 299–300.
Published: 01 May 1982
... unsigned) may have been forwarded by Martí from New York for someone else, but are certainly not in his style. Number XXII probably is not Martí’s, although it is signed “El Amigo,” a pseudonym used in connection with articles he wrote. Mejía Sánchez himself has wisely relegated Number XXXI (unsigned...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1979) 59 (1): 64–80.
Published: 01 February 1979
... d’affaires in Mexico between 1830 and 1861, only one, George B. Mathew, a chargé d’affaires of brief tenure, had any tolerance whatsoever for Mexican statesmen. The Spanish diplomats were equally as disdainful. The Spanish minister, Pedro Pascual Oliver, wrote in 1843: “Constitutional monarchy...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1962) 42 (4): 502–520.
Published: 01 November 1962
... Sugar & Coffee,” Lord Ripon wrote Gladstone in 1841, “it must be in return for some stringent & really effective regulation on their part in respect to Slave Trading, & even Slavery.” 10 Most British contemporaries believed, not without reason, that increased imports of Brazilian slave...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1970) 50 (2): 257–278.
Published: 01 May 1970
... euphoria” and that the “undisputable law” of the moment was the law of progress. 45 When the first Latin American university student congress met in Montevideo (1908), he emerged as the leading orator of the San Marcos delegation, enunciating a vigorous progressivism. As he wrote later, the Montevideo...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1974) 54 (4): 682–690.
Published: 01 November 1974
...”; the graft and corruption that the Ambassador had labored to eliminate reappeared as Zayas and members of his family prepared to lay siege to the national treasury. The need for a history of Cuba was first expressed during Crowder’s most anxious moments in Havana, when, the Ambassador wrote, “things were...
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