1.
18 Major Moments In Hispanic History That All Americans Need To Know. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/18-major-moments-hispanic-history_us_55f70275e4b042295e370d3c.
2.
Latino Rebels | #CharlaEditorial: Why You Should Care About Latin America. http://www.latinorebels.com/2015/01/15/charlaeditorial-why-you-should-care-about-latin-america/.
3.
Brown, M. From frontiers to football: an alternative history of Latin America since 1800. (Reaktion Books, 2014).
4.
Assessment and Feedback – AM2016 Americas Plural: Latin ... https://blackboard.le.ac.uk/webapps/blackboard/content/listContentEditable.jsp?content_id=_1728578_1&course_id=_13015_1&mode=reset.
5.
Loewen, J. W. Lies my teacher told me: everything your American history textbook got wrong. (New Press, 2008).
6.
Restall, M. Seven myths of the Spanish conquest. (Oxford University Press, 2003).
7.
Axtell, J. Beyond 1492: Encounters in Colonial North America. (Oxford University Press, 1992).
8.
Chasteen, J. C. Born in blood and fire: a concise history of Latin America. (Norton, 2006).
9.
New Laws of the Indies, 1542. Internet History Sourcebooks.
10.
Slave Code of South Carolina, May 1740.
11.
McFarlane, Anthony. America and the Americas: Independence and Revolution, 1776-1826. History Today 34,.
12.
Simon Bolivar, ‘The Jamaica Letter’ (1815).
13.
Joseph, G. M. & Henderson, T. J. The Mexico reader: history, culture, politics. (Duke University Press, 2002).
14.
Nouzeilles, G. & Montaldo, G. R. Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, Civilisation or Barbarism, from The Argentina reader: history, culture, politics. vol. Latin America in translation/en traducción/em tradução (2002).
15.
Frederick Jackson Turner, "The Significance of the Frontier in American History - turner.pdf.
16.
Benito Juarez, ‘Notes for my Children’ (1857). http://historymuse.net/readings/JuarezLAREFORMA.htm.
17.
Grandin, G. The Liberal Traditions in the Americas: Rights, Sovereignty, and the Origins of Liberal Multilateralism. The American Historical Review 117, 68–91 (2012).
18.
Carlisle Indian School Digital Resource Center. http://carlisleindian.dickinson.edu/images.
19.
Joseph, G. M. & Henderson, T. J. The Mexico reader: history, culture, politics. (Duke University Press, 2002).
20.
Alexander S. Dawson. Histories and Memories of the Indian Boarding Schools in Mexico, Canada, and the United States. Latin American Perspectives 39, 80–99 (2012).
21.
Foote, N. & Goebel, M. Immigration and National Identities in Latin America. (University Press of Florida, 2014).
22.
Nouzeilles, G., Montaldo, G., Kirk, R. & Starn, O. The Argentina Reader: History, Culture, Politics. vol. Latin America in Translation (Duke University Press, 2009).
23.
Batista de Laceda, J. ‘The Metis, or Half-Breeds of Brazil’, in G. Spiller (ed.), Papers on Inter-racial problems, communicated to the first Universal Races Congress, University of London, July 26-29, 1911. https://ia802605.us.archive.org/18/items/papersoninterrac00univiala/papersoninterrac00univiala.pdf.
24.
Slavery and Anti Slavery: A Transnational Archive — University of Leicester. https://www2.le.ac.uk/library/find/databases/s/SlaveryandAntiSlaveryTransnationalArchive.
25.
Levine, R. M. & Crocitti, J. J. The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. vol. The Latin America readers (Duke University Press, 1999).
26.
Commander of the Department of Virginia to the General-in-Chief of the Army, May 27, 1861.
27.
Andrews, G. R. Afro-Latin America, 1800-2000. (Oxford University Press, 2004).
28.
Drescher, S. Brazilian Abolition in Comparative Perspective. The Hispanic American Historical Review 68, (1988).
29.
Blanchard, Peter. Pitt Latin American Series : Under the Flags of Freedom : Slave Soldiers and the Wars of Independence in Spanish South America. (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2008).
30.
Schmidt-Nowara, C. Slavery, freedom, and abolition in Latin America and the Atlantic world. vol. Diálogos (University of New Mexico Press, 2011).
31.
manning, chandra. We Had Our Own Refugee Crisis. You Know it as the Civil War. | History News Network.
32.
Sinha, M. The slave’s cause: a history of abolition. (Yale University Press, 2016).
33.
Brown, M. From Frontiers to Football: An Alternative History of Latin America Since 1800. vol. Reaktion Books-Globalities (Reaktion Books, Limited, 2014).
34.
Our Documents - Theodore Roosevelt’s Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine (1905).
35.
José Martí - Nuestro America (Our America), 1891. http://writing.upenn.edu/library/Marti_Jose_Our-America.html.
36.
Brown, M. From Frontiers to Football: An Alternative History of Latin America Since 1800. vol. Reaktion Books-Globalities (Reaktion Books, Limited, 2014).
37.
Louis A. Pérez Jr. Fear and Loathing of Fidel Castro: Sources of US Policy toward Cuba. Journal of Latin American Studies 34, 227–254 (2002).
38.
Our Americas Archive Partnership. http://oaap.rice.edu/index.php.
39.
Keen, B., Buffington, R. & Caimari, L. M. Keen’s Latin American civilization: history & society, 1492 to the present. (Westview Press, 2004).
40.
Chasteen, J. C. Born in blood and fire: a concise history of Latin America. (Norton, 2006).
41.
Williamson, E. The Penguin history of Latin America. (Penguin, 2009).
42.
Fowler, W. Latin America, 1800-2000: modern history for modern languages. (Arnold, 2002).
43.
Brown, M. From frontiers to football: an alternative history of Latin America since 1800. (Reaktion Books, 2014).
44.
Latin American History.
45.
Holloway, T. H. A companion to Latin American history. vol. Blackwell companions to world history (Blackwell, 2008).
46.
Skidmore, T. E., Smith, P. H. & Green, J. N. Modern Latin America. (Oxford University Press, 2010).
47.
Bethell, L. The Cambridge history of Latin America: Vol. 1: Colonial Latin America. vol. Cambridge histories online (Cambridge University Press, 2008).
48.
Lockhart, J. & Schwartz, S. B. Early Latin America: a history of colonial Spanish America and Brazil. vol. Cambridge Latin American studies (Cambridge University Press, 1983).
49.
Burkholder, M. A. & Johnson, L. L. Colonial Latin America. (Oxford University Press, 1990).
50.
Bethell, L. Colonial Spanish America. (Cambridge University Press, 1987).
51.
Bakewell, P. A history of Latin America: c.1450 to the present. vol. Blackwell history of the world (Blackwell, 2004).
52.
Carmagnani, M. The Other West: Latin America from Invasion to Globalization. vol. California World History Library (University of California Press, 2011).
53.
Problems in modern Latin American history. (SR Books, 2004).
54.
Wright, T. C. Latin America since independence: two centuries of continuity and change. vol. Latin American Silhouettes (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017).
55.
Tindall, G. B. & Shi, D. E. America: a narrative history. (Norton, 2004).
56.
Boyer, P. S. American history: a very short introduction. vol. Very short introductions (Oxford University Press, 2012).
57.
Norton, M. B. A people and a nation: a history of the United States. (Houghton Mifflin, 2005).
58.
Brogan, H. The Penguin history of the United States of America. (Penguin Books, 2001).
59.
Kupperman, K. O. Major problems in American colonial history: documents and essays. vol. Major problems in American history (D.C. Heath, 1993).
60.
Problems in modern Mexican history: sources and interpretations. vol. Latin American Silhouettes (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017).
61.
Meyer, M. C., Sherman, W. L. & Deeds, S. M. The course of Mexican history. (Oxford University Press, 2011).
62.
Hamnett, B. R. A concise history of Mexico. (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
63.
Hernández Chávez, A. Mexico: a brief history. (University of California Press, 2006).
64.
Rock, D. Argentina, 1516-1982: from Spanish colonization to the Falklands War and Alfonsín. (Tauris, 1986).
65.
Starn, O., Degregori, C. I. & Kirk, R. The Peru reader: history, culture, politics. (Duke University Press, 2005).
66.
Smith, J. & Vinhosa, F. History of Brazil, 1500-2000: politics, economy, society, diplomacy. (Routledge, 2013).
67.
Klein, H. S. A concise history of Bolivia. (Cambridge University Press, 2011).
68.
Bethell, L. Cuba: a short history. (1993).
69.
Safford, F. & Palacios, M. Colombia: fragmented land, divided society. (Oxford University Press, 2002).
70.
Lambert, P. & Nickson, A. The Paraguay reader: history, culture, politics. (Duke University Press, 2013).
71.
Lombardi, J. V. Venezuela: the search for order, the dream of progress. (Oxford University Press, 1982).
72.
Collier, S. & Sater, W. F. A history of Chile, 1808-2002. vol. 82 (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
73.
Brotherston, G. Image of the New World: the American continent portrayed in native texts. (Thames and Hudson, 1979).
74.
William B. Taylor & Kenneth Mills. Colonial Spanish America: A Documentary History. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1998).
75.
Calloway, C. G. First peoples: a documentary survey of American Indian history. (Bedford/St. Martins, 2012).
76.
George Catlin’s Indian Gallery / American Art. http://americanart.si.edu/catlin/highlights.html.
77.
Bayor, Ronald H. The Columbia Documentary History of Race and Ethnicity in America. (Columbia University Press, 2004).
78.
Bean, J. Race and Liberty in America: The Essential Reader. (The University Press of Kentucky, 2009).
79.
Wood, J. A. Problems in Modern Latin American History: Sources and Interpretations. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2013).
80.
Susan A. Miller. Native Historians Write Back: The Indigenous Paradigm in American Indian Historiography. Wicazo Sa Review 24, 25–45 (2009).
81.
Steve J. Stern. Paradigms of Conquest: History, Historiography, and Politics. Journal of Latin American Studies 24, 1–34 (1992).
82.
Maybury-Lewis, D. A New World Dilemma: The Indian Question in the Americas. Bulletin of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 46, (1993).
83.
Kubal, T. Cultural movements and collective memory: Christopher columbus and the rewriting of the national origin myth. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008).
84.
Warren, D. New Worlds, Old Orders: Native Americans and the Columbus Quincentenary. The Public Historian 14, 71–90 (1992).
85.
O’Brien, Jean M. Firsting and Lasting : Writing Indians Out of Existence in New England. (University of Minnesota Press, 2010).
86.
Stavig, W. The world of T�upac Amaru: conflict, community, and identity in colonial Peru. (University of Nebraska Press, 1999).
87.
Sean P. Harvey. Ideas of Race in Early America.
88.
Dain, B. R. Hideous Monster of the Mind : American Race Theory in the Early Republic. (Harvard University Press, 20011201).
89.
Chaplin, J. E. Natural Philosophy and an Early Racial Idiom in North America: Comparing English and Indian Bodies. The William and Mary Quarterly 54, (1997).
90.
Shoemaker, N. A strange likeness: becoming red and white in eighteenth-century North America. (Oxford University Press, 2004).
91.
Harvey, S. P. Native tongues: colonialism and race from encounter to the reservation. vol. Harvard Historical Studies (Harvard University Press, 2015).
92.
Sweet, John Wood, 1966-. Bodies politic: negotiating race in the American North, 1730-1830. (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006).
93.
O’Toole, R. S. Bound lives: Africans, Indians, and the making of race in colonial Peru. vol. Pitt Latin American Series (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2012).
94.
Dueñas, A. Indians and mestizos in the ‘lettered city’: reshaping justice, social hierarchy, and political culture in colonial Peru. (University Press of Colorado, 2010).
95.
Lockhart, J. Spanish Peru, 1532-1560: a colonial society. (Wisconsin University Press, 1968).
96.
Imperial Subjects: Race and Identity in Colonial Latin America. (Duke University Press, 2009).
97.
Cahill, D. P. & Tov�ias, B. New world, first nations: Native peoples of Mesoamerica and the Andes under colonial rule. (Sussex Academic Press, 2006).
98.
Cope, R. D. & American Council of Learned Societies. The limits of racial domination: plebeian society in colonial Mexico City, 1660-1720. (University of Wisconsin Press, 1994).
99.
Nicholas Hudson. From "Nation to ‘Race’: The Origin of Racial Classification in Eighteenth-Century Thought. Eighteenth-Century Studies 29, 247–264 (1996).
100.
McClintock, A. Imperial Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest. (Taylor and Francis, 2013).
101.
Alexander S. Dawson. ‘Wild Indians,’ ‘Mexican Gentlemen,’ and the Lessons Learned in the Casa del Estudiante Indígena, 1926-1932. The Americas 57, 329–361 (2001).
102.
Poole, D. Vision, race, and modernity: a visual economy of the Andean image world. vol. Princeton studies in culture/power/history (Princeton University Press, 1997).
103.
Powell, T. G. Mexican Intellectuals and the Indian Question, 1876-1911. The Hispanic American Historical Review 48, (1968).
104.
Vaughan, M. K. & Lewis, S. E. The eagle and the virgin: nation and cultural revolution in Mexico, 1920-1940. (Duke University Press, 2006).
105.
Graham, R. The Idea of race in Latin America: Skidmore: 1870-1940. vol. Critical reflections on Latin America series (University of Texas Press, 1990).
106.
Alexander S. Dawson. From Models for the Nation to Model Citizens: Indigenismo and the ‘Revindication’ of the Mexican Indian, 1920-40. Journal of Latin American Studies 30, 279–308 (1998).
107.
The India Bonita Contest of 1921 and the Ethnicization of Mexican National Culture. Hispanic American Historical Review 82, 291–328 (2002).
108.
Brading, D. A. Manuel Gamio and Official Indigenismo in Mexico. Bulletin of Latin American Research 7, (1988).
109.
Virginia Garrard-Burnett. Indians Are Drunks and Drunks Are Indians: Alcohol and indigenismo in Guatemala, 1890-1940. Bulletin of Latin American Research 19, 341–356 (2000).
110.
Carey, D. & Taylor, W. B. Distilling the influence of alcohol: aguardiente in Guatemalan history. (University Press of Florida, 2012).
111.
Wllie Hiatt. Flying ‘Cholo’: Incas, Airplanes, and the Contruction of Andean Modernity in 1920s Cuzco, Peru. The Americas 63, 327–358 (2007).
112.
Larson, B. Trials of Nation Making: Liberalism, Race, and Ethnicity in the Andes, 1810-1910. (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
113.
Ann Zulawski. Hygiene and ‘The Indian Problem’: Ethnicity and Medicine in Bolivia, 1910-1920. Latin American Research Review 35, 107–129 (2000).
114.
Crow, J. The Mapuche in Modern Chile: A Cultural History. (University Press of Florida, 2013).
115.
Adelman, J. & Aron, S. From Borderlands to Borders: Empires, Nation-States, and the Peoples in between in North American History. The American Historical Review 104, (1999).
116.
Rebecca Earle. The Return of the Native: Indians and Myth-Making in Spanish America, 1810–1930. (Duke University Press, 2007).
117.
Appelbaum, N. P. & Rosemblatt, A. S. Race and Nation in Modern Latin America. (University of North Carolina Press, 2003).
118.
PABLO-RAÚL ARREOLA. OF CONQUEST AND CIVILIZATION: IGNACIO DOMEYKO AND THE INDIAN QUESTION IN CHILE. The Polish Review 44, 69–82 (1999).
119.
Cecilia Mendez G. Incas Si, Indios No: Notes on Peruvian Creole Nationalism and Its Contemporary Crisis. Journal of Latin American Studies 28, 197–225 (1996).
120.
Wade, P. Race and ethnicity in Latin America : Anthropology, Culture and Society. (Pluto Press).
121.
Kuenzli, E. G. Indian Problems, Indian Solutions: Incantations of Nation in Early Twentieth-Century Bolivia. Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies 8, 122–139 (2013).
122.
Paul Gillingham. The Emperor of Ixcateopan: Fraud, Nationalism and Memory in Modern Mexico. Journal of Latin American Studies 37, 561–584 (2005).
123.
An Image of ‘Our Indian’: Type Photographs and Racial Sentiments in Oaxaca, 1920-1940. Hispanic American Historical Review 84, 37–82 (2004).
124.
Jacqueline Fear-Segal. Nineteenth-Century Indian Education: Universalism versus Evolutionism. Journal of American Studies 33, 323–341 (1999).
125.
Fear-Segal, J. White Man’s Club: Schools: Indigenous Education: Race, and the Struggle of Indian Acculturation. Indigenous Education. vol. Indigenous education (University of Nebraska Press, 2007).
126.
Fear-Segal, J. White Man’s Club: Schools: Indigenous Education: Race, and the Struggle of Indian Acculturation. Indigenous Education. vol. Indigenous education (University of Nebraska Press, 2007).
127.
Horsman, R. Race and manifest destiny: the origins of American racial anglo-saxonism. (Harvard University Press, 1981).
128.
Roediger, D. R. Special Issue on Racial Consciousness and Nation-Building in the Early Republic. Journal of the Early Republic 19, (1999).
129.
Limerick, P. N. The legacy of conquest: the unbroken past of the American West. (Norton, 1987).
130.
Smith, S. L. Reimagining Indians: Native Americans through Anglo Eyes, 1880-1940. (Oxford University Press, 2000).
131.
Nash, G. B. The Hidden History of Mestizo America. The Journal of American History 82, (1995).
132.
Adams, D. W. Education for extinction: American Indians and the boarding school experience, 1875-1928. (University Press of Kansas, 1995).
133.
Lowery, M. M. Lumbee Indians in the Jim Crow South: Race, Identity, and the Making of a Nation. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2010).
134.
Scheckel, S. Insistence of the Indian: Race and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century American Culture. (Princeton University Press, 1998).
135.
Maddox, L. Removals: Nineteenth-Century American Literature and the Politics of Indian Affairs. (Oxford University Press, 1991).
136.
SEAN P. HARVEY. ‘Must Not Their Languages Be Savage and Barbarous Like Them?’ Philology, Indian Removal, and Race Science. Journal of the Early Republic 30, 505–532 (2010).
137.
Conn, S. History’’s Shadow: Native Americans and Historical Consciousness in the Nineteenth Century. (University of Chicago Press, 2008).
138.
To Hell with the Wigs! Native American Representation and Resistance at the World’s Columbian Exposition. The American Indian Quarterly 36, 403–442.
139.
Virtual Jamestown: Slave Laws. http://www.virtualjamestown.org/practise.html#5.
140.
Slavery Anti-Slavery  Home. http://find.galegroup.com.ezproxy4.lib.le.ac.uk/sas/dispBasicSearch.do?prodId=SAS&userGroupName=leicester.
141.
Garcia Rodriguez, G. & Westrate, N. L. Voices of the Enslaved in Nineteenth-Century Cuba: A Documentary History. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2011).
142.
Conrad, R. E. Children of God’s fire: a documentary history of black slavery in Brazil. (Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994).
143.
Berlin, I. Freedom: a documentary history of emancipation 1861-1867 : selected from the holdings of the national archives of the United States, Series 1: The wartime genesis of free labor : the lower South. (Cambridge University Press, 1990).
144.
Freedmen and Southern Society Project - Welcome Page. http://www.freedmen.umd.edu/index.html.
145.
Wood, J. A. Problems in Modern Latin American History: Sources and Interpretations. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2013).
146.
Slavery Images.
147.
Slavery Primary Sources Page: Slatta.
148.
The Bull Romanus Pontifex, 1455.
149.
Schwartz, S. B. Tropical Babylons: Sugar and the Making of the Atlantic World, 1450-1680. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2004).
150.
Bowser, F. P. The African slave in colonial Peru, 1524-1650. (Stanford University Press, 1974).
151.
RACE - The Power of an Illusion | PBS. http://www.pbs.org/race/000_General/000_00-Home.htm.
152.
Jordan, W. D. & Institute of Early American History and Culture. White over black: American attitudes toward the Negro, 1550-1812. (University of North Carolina Press for the Institute of Early American History and Culture, 1968).
153.
Sweet, J. H. The Iberian Roots of American Racist Thought. The William and Mary Quarterly 54, (1997).
154.
Martínez, M. E. The Black Blood of New Spain: Limpieza de Sangre, Racial Violence, and Gendered Power in Early Colonial Mexico. William and Mary Quarterly 61, (2004).
155.
Andrew S. Curran. The Anatomy of Blackness: Science and Slavery in an Age of Enlightenment. (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011).
156.
Afro-Latino voices. (Hackett Pub., 2009).
157.
Klein, H. S. African slavery in Latin America and the Caribbean. (Oxford University Press, 1986).
158.
La Rosa Corzo, G. Runaway slave settlements in Cuba: resistance and repression. vol. Envisioning Cuba (University of North Carolina Press, 2003).
159.
Bethell, L. The abolition of the Brazilian slave trade: Britain, Brazil and the slave trade question, 1807-1869. vol. Cambridge Latin American studies (University Press, 1970).
160.
Conrad, R. E. The destruction of Brazilian slavery, 1850-1888. (Krieger, 1993).
161.
Curry-Machado, J. How Cuba burned with the ghosts of British slavery: race, abolition and the. Slavery & Abolition 25, 71–93 (2004).
162.
Franklin, S. L. Women and slavery in nineteenth-century colonial Cuba. vol. Rochester studies in African history and the diaspora (University of Rochester Press, 2012).
163.
Graden, D. T. From slavery to freedom in Brazil: Bahia, 1835-1900. vol. Diálogos (University of New Mexico Press, 2006).
164.
Schwartz, S. B. Slaves, peasants, and rebels: reconsidering Brazilian slavery. (University of Illinois Press, 1996).
165.
Scott, R. J. Slave emancipation in Cuba: the transition to free labor, 1860-1899. (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2000).
166.
Schmidt‐Nowara, C. The end of slavery and the end of empire: Slave emancipation in Cuba and Puerto Rico. Slavery & Abolition 21, 188–207 (2000).
167.
Scott, R. J. Gradual Abolition and the Dynamics of Slave Emancipation in Cuba, 1868-86. The Hispanic American Historical Review 63, (1983).
168.
Read, I. The Hierarchies of Slavery in Santos, Brazil, 1822-1888. (Stanford University Press, 2012).
169.
Berlin, I., Hoffman, R., & United States Capitol Historical Society. Slavery and freedom in the age of the American Revolution. vol. Perspectives on the American Revolution (University Press of Virginia for the United States Capitol Historical Society, 1983).
170.
Berlin, I. Slaves no more: three essays on emancipation and the Civil War. vol. Freedom : a documentary history of emancipation, 1861-1867 (Cambridge University Press, 1992).
171.
Foner, E. Reconstruction: America’s unfinished revolution, 1863-1877. vol. New American nation series (Perennial Classics, 2002).
172.
McPherson, J. M. Battle cry of freedom: the Civil War era. vol. Penguin history (Penguin in association with Oxford University Press, 1990).
173.
Foner, E. Nothing but freedom: emancipation and its legacy. vol. The Walter Lynwood Fleming lectures in southern history (Louisiana State University Press, 1983).
174.
Foner, E. The Meaning of Freedom in the Age of Emancipation. The Journal of American History 81, (1994).
175.
Camp, S. M. H. Closer to freedom: enslaved women and everyday resistance in the plantation South. vol. Gender and American culture (University of North Carolina Press, 2004).
176.
Perman, M. Major problems in the Civil War and Reconstruction: documents and essays. vol. Major problems in American history (D.C. Heath, 1991).
177.
Richardson, H. C. The death of Reconstruction: race, labor, and politics in the post-Civil War North, 1865-1901. (Harvard University Press, 2004).
178.
Communities in Revolt: A Symposium on Nat Turner’s Rebellion.
179.
Comparative Studies of Law, Slavery and Race in the Americas - viewcontent.cgi.
180.
Slavery in the Americas.
181.
Cottrol, R. J. The Long, Lingering Shadow: Slavery, Race, and Law in the American Hemisphere. vol. Studies in the Legal History of the South (University of Georgia Press, 2013).
182.
Jane Landers. Slavery in the Spanish Caribbean and the Failure of Abolition. Review (Fernand Braudel Center) 31, 343–371 (2008).
183.
Slavery & Abolition.
184.
Scott, R. J. Exploring the Meaning of Freedom: Postemancipation Societies in Comparative Perspective. The Hispanic American Historical Review 68, (1988).
185.
Blackburn, R. The overthrow of colonial slavery 1776-1848. (Verso, 1988).
186.
Eltis, D., Lewis, F. D. & Sokoloff, K. L. Slavery in the Development of the Americas. (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
187.
Scully, P. & Paton, D. Gender and slave emancipation in the Atlantic world. (Duke University Press, 2005).
188.
Scott, R. J. Defining the Boundaries of Freedom in the World of Cane: Cuba, Brazil, and Louisiana after Emancipation. The American Historical Review 99, (1994).
189.
Laird Bergad,. The Comparative Histories of Slavery in Brazil, Cuba, and the United States. (Cambridge University Press, 2007).
190.
Davis, D. B. Inhuman bondage: the rise and fall of slavery in the New World. (Oxford University Press, 2008).
191.
Foner, L. & Genovese, E. D. Slavery in the new world: a reader in comparative history. vol. Readers in comparative history (Prentice-Hall, 1969).
192.
Genovese, E. D. From Rebellion to Revolution: Afro-American Slave Revolts in the Making of the Modern World. vol. Walter Lynwood Fleming Lectures in Southern History (LSU Press, 1981).
193.
Eltis, D. The rise of African slavery in the Americas. (Cambridge University Press, 2000).
194.
Alejandro de la Fuente. From Slaves to Citizens? Tannenbaum and the Debates on Slavery, Emancipation, and Race Relations in Latin America. International Labor and Working-Class History 154–173 (2010).
195.
Walker, Daniel E. No More, No More : Slavery and Cultural Resistance in Havana and New Orleans. (University of Minnesota Press, 2004).
196.
Open Collections Program: Immigration to the US - , 1789-1930. http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/immigration/index.html.
197.
Irish Migration Studies in Latin America > The Settlement. http://www.irlandeses.org/hmenu3.htm.
198.
Levine, R. M. & Crocitti, J. J. The Brazil reader: history, culture, politics. (Duke University Press, 1999).
199.
Kirk, R., Starn, O., Nouzeilles, G. & Montaldo, G. R. The Argentina Reader: History, Culture, Politics. (Duke University Press, 2002).
200.
Lesser, J. Immigration, ethnicity, and national identity in Brazil, 1808 to the present. vol. New approaches to the Americas (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
201.
Gobat, M. The Invention of Latin America: A Transnational History of Anti-Imperialism, Democracy, and Race. The American Historical Review 118, 1345–1375 (2013).
202.
Mara Loveman. The Race to Progress: Census Taking and Nation Making in Brazil (1870–1920). Hispanic American Historical Review 89, 435–470 (2009).
203.
Gregg P. Bocketti. Italian Immigrants, Brazilian Football, and the Dilemma of National Identity. Journal of Latin American Studies 40, 275–302 (2008).
204.
Dávila, J. Diploma of whiteness: race and social policy in Brazil, 1917-1945. (Duke University Press, 2003).
205.
Shumway, N. The invention of Argentina. (University of California Press, 1991).
206.
Zimmermann, E. A. Racial Ideas and Social Reform: Argentina, 1890-1916. The Hispanic American Historical Review 72, (1992).
207.
Ambivalent Argentina: Nationalism, Exoticism, and Latin Americanism at the 1889 Paris Universal Exposition. Nepantla: Views from South 2, 115–139 (2001).
208.
Lai, W. L. & Tan, C.-B. The Chinese in Latin America and the Caribbean. (BRILL, 2010).
209.
Dussel, I. Between exoticism and universalism: educational sections in Latin American participation at international exhibitions, 1860–1900. Paedagogica Historica 47, 601–617 (2011).
210.
Jose Murilo De Carvalho. Brazil 1870-1914. The Force of Tradition. Journal of Latin American Studies 24, 145–162 (1992).
211.
Mauricio Tenorio Trillo. 1910 Mexico City: Space and Nation in the City of the Centenario. Journal of Latin American Studies 28, 75–104 (1996).
212.
Tenorio-Trillo, M. Mexico at the world’s fairs: crafting a modern nation. vol. The new historicism (University of California Press, 1996).
213.
Solberg, C. & University of Texas at Austin. Institute of Latin American Studies. Immigration and nationalism: Argentina and Chile, 1890-1914. vol. Latin American monographs (University of Texas Press for the Institute of Latin American Studies, 1970).
214.
Plesch, M. Demonizing and redeeming the gaucho: social conflict, xenophobia and the invention of Argentine national music. Patterns of Prejudice 47, 337–358 (2013).
215.
Korzeniewicz, R. P. The Labour Movement and the State in Argentina, 1887-1907. Bulletin of Latin American Research 8, (1989).
216.
Jeane Delaney. Making Sense of Modernity: Changing Attitudes toward the Immigrant and the Gaucho in Turn-Of-The-Century Argentina. Comparative Studies in Society and History 38, 434–459 (1996).
217.
Mass migration to modern Latin America. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2003).
218.
Bockelman, B. Between the Gaucho and the Tango: Popular Songs and the Shifting Landscape of Modern Argentine Identity, 1895–1915. The American Historical Review 116, 577–601 (2011).
219.
Brown, J. C. Foreign and Native-Born Workers in Porfirian Mexico. The American Historical Review 98, (1993).
220.
Jürgen Buchenau. Small Numbers, Great Impact: Mexico and Its Immigrants, 1821-1973. Journal of American Ethnic History 20, 23–49 (2001).
221.
Chambers, G. A. Race, Nation, and West Indian Immigration to Honduras, 1890-1940. (LSU Press, 2010).
222.
‘Barbados or Canada?’ Race, Immigration, and Nation in Early-Twentieth-Century Cuba. Hispanic American Historical Review 80, 415–462 (2000).
223.
Curtis, J. R. Mexicali’s Chinatown. Geographical Review 85, (1995).
224.
Goebel, M. Gauchos, Gringos and Gallegos: The Assimilation of Italian and Spanish Immigrants in the Making of Modern Uruguay 1880-1930. Past & Present 208, 191–229 (2010).
225.
Guy, D. J. Sex and danger in Buenos Aires: prostitution, family and nation in Argentina. (University of Nebraska Press, 1995).
226.
Holloway, T. H. Creating the Reserve Army? The Immigration Program of Sao Paulo, 1886-1930. International Migration Review 12, (1978).
227.
Endō, T. Exporting Japan: politics of emigration toward Latin America. (University of Illinois Press, 2009).
228.
Ayumi Takenaka. The Japanese in Peru: History of Immigration, Settlement, and Racialization. Latin American Perspectives 31, 77–98 (2004).
229.
Jacobson, M. F. Barbarian virtues: the United States encounters foreign peoples at home and abroad, 1876-1917. (Hill and Wang, 2001).
230.
Ordover, N. American Eugenics: Race, Queer Anatomy, and the Science of Nationalism. (University of Minnesota Press, 2003).
231.
Roediger, D. R. The wages of whiteness: race and the making of the American working class. vol. The Haymarket series (Verso, 1999).
232.
Ganz, C. The 1933 Chicago World’s Fair: century of progress. (University of Illinois Press, 2008).
233.
Jacobson, M. F. Whiteness of a different color: European immigrants and the alchemy of race. (Harvard University Press, 1998).
234.
Nugent, W. T. K. Crossings: the great transatlantic migrations, 1870-1914. (Indiana University Press, 1992).
235.
Schrag, P. Not Fit for Our Society: Immigration and Nativism in America. (University of California Press, 2010).
236.
Higham, J. Strangers in the land: patterns of American nativism, 1860-1925. (Rutgers University Press, 1988).
237.
Ordover, N. American Eugenics: Race, Queer Anatomy, and the Science of Nationalism. (University of Minnesota Press, 2003).
238.
Aarim-Heriot, N. Chinese Immigrants. vol. The Asian American Experience (University of Illinois Press, 2006).
239.
Robin F. Bachin. At the Nexus of Labor and Leisure: Baseball, Nativism, and the 1919 Black Sox Scandal. Journal of Social History 36, 941–962 (2003).
240.
Kristofer Allerfeldt. ‘And We Got Here First’: Albert Johnson, National Origins and Self-Interest in the Immigration Debate of the 1920s. Journal of Contemporary History 45, 7–26 (2010).
241.
Guglielmo, T. A. White on arrival: Italians, race, color and power in Chicago, 1890-1945. (Oxford University Press, 2004).
242.
Mae M. Ngai. Nationalism, Immigration Control, and the Ethnoracial Remapping of America in the 1920S. OAH Magazine of History 21, 11–15 (2007).
243.
Nicholas Wisseman. ‘Beware the Yellow Peril and Behold the Black Plague’: The Internationalization of American White Supremacy and its Critiques, Chicago 1919. Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1998-) 103, 43–66 (2010).
244.
Lee, Robert G.      Anderson, Wanni Wibulswasdi. Displacements and Diasporas : Asians in the Americas. (Rutgers University Press, 2005).
245.
George Reid Andrews. Brazilian Racial Democracy, 1900-90: An American Counterpoint. Journal of Contemporary History 31, 483–507 (1996).
246.
Baily, S. L. The Adjustment of Italian Immigrants in Buenos Aires and New York, 1870-1914. The American Historical Review 88, (1983).
247.
Baily, S. L. Immigrants in the Lands of Promise: Italians in Buenos Aires and New York City, 1870-1914. vol. Cornell Studies in Comparative History (Cornell University Press, 2004).
248.
Delgado, G. Making the Chinese Mexican: Global Migration, Localism, and Exclusion in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands. (Stanford University Press, 2013).
249.
LEE, E. The ‘Yellow Peril’ and Asian Exclusion in the Americas. Pacific Historical Review 76, 537–562 (2007).
250.
Internet History Sourcebooks - Latin America in the 19th Century. https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/Halsall/mod/modsbook32.asp.
251.
Wood, J. A. Problems in Modern Latin American History: Sources and Interpretations. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2013).
252.
Internet History Sourcebooks - 19th century Latin America.
253.
Bakewell, P. A history of Latin America: c.1450 to the present. vol. Blackwell history of the world (Blackwell, 2004).
254.
Lynch, J. Caudillos in Spanish America 1800–1850. (Oxford University Press, 1992).
255.
Frank Safford. The Problem of Political Order in Early Republican Spanish America. Journal of Latin American Studies 24, 83–97 (1992).
256.
López-Alves, F. State formation and democracy in Latin America, 1810-1900. (Duke University Press, 2000).
257.
Roberto Gargarella. Towards a Typology of Latin American Constitutionalism, 1810-60. Latin American Research Review 39, 141–153 (2004).
258.
Fowler, Will. The Mexican Experience : Forceful Negotiations : The Origins of the Pronunciamiento in Nineteenth-Century Mexico. (University of Nebraska Press, 2011).
259.
Guy P. C. Thomson. Bulwarks of Patriotic Liberalism: The National Guard, Philharmonic Corps and Patriotic Juntas in Mexico, 1847-88. Journal of Latin American Studies 22, 31–68 (1990).
260.
Anna, Timothy E. (Distinguished Professor of History, U. of. Forging Mexico. (University of Nebraska Press, 2002).
261.
Will Fowler. Dreams of Stability: Mexican Political Thought during the ‘Forgotten Years’. An Analysis of the Beliefs of the Creole Intelligentsia (1821-1853). Bulletin of Latin American Research 14, 287–312 (1995).
262.
Thomson, G. P. C. Popular Aspects of Liberalism in Mexico, 1848-1888. Bulletin of Latin American Research 10, (1991).
263.
Fowler, Will. Tornel and Santa Anna. (Greenwood Press, 2000).
264.
Will Fowler. Valentín Gómez Farías: Perceptions of Radicalism in Independent Mexico, 1821-1847. Bulletin of Latin American Research 15, 39–62 (1996).
265.
Posada-Carbó, E. & Jaksić, I. Shipwrecks and Survivals: Liberalism in Nineteenth-Century Latin America. Intellectual History Review 23, 479–498 (2013).
266.
Sabato, H. On Political Citizenship in Nineteenth-Century Latin America. The American Historical Review 106, (2001).
267.
Chasteen, J. C. Heroes on horseback: a life and times of the last gaucho caudillos. vol. Di�alogos (University of New Mexico Press, 1995).
268.
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, 503–535 (2000).
269.
De la Fuente, A. & ebrary, Inc. Children of Facundo: caudillo and gaucho insurgency during the Argentine state-formation process (La Rioja, 1853-1870). (Duke University Press, 2000).
270.
David Rock. State-Building and Political Systems in Nineteenth-Century Argentina and Uruguay. Past & Present 176–202 (2000).
271.
Lynch, J. & Lynch, J. Argentine caudillo: Juan Manuel de Rosas. (SR Books, 2001).
272.
Henderson, Peter V. N. Diálogos Series : Course of Andean History. (University of New Mexico Press, 2013).
273.
Beezley, W. H. Caudillismo: An Interpretive Note. Journal of Inter-American Studies 11, (1969).
274.
Political Cultures in the Andes, 1750-1950. (Duke University Press, 2005).
275.
Wood, G. S. Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815. vol. Oxford History of the United States (Oxford University Press, USA, 2010).
276.
Dworetz, S. M. The unvarnished doctrine: Locke, liberalism, and the American Revolution. (Duke University Press, 1990).
277.
Appleby, J. Liberalism and republicanism in the historical imagination. (Harvard University Press, 1992).
278.
Waldstreicher, D., Pasley, J. L. & Robertson, A. W. Beyond the Founders: New Approaches to the Political History of the Early American Republic. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2004).
279.
Edling, M. M. Revolution in Favor of Government: Origins of the U. S. Constitution and the Making of the American State. (Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2003).
280.
Appleby, J. O. Inheriting the revolution: the first generation of Americans. (Belknap Press, 2001).
281.
Calloway, C. G. The American Revolution in Indian country: crisis and diversity in native American communities. vol. Cambridge studies in North American Indian history (Cambridge University Press, 1995).
282.
Chambers, W. N. Political parties in a new nation: the American experience, 1776-1809. (Oxford University Press, 1963).
283.
Elkins, S. M. & McKitrick, E. The age of federalism. (Oxford University Press, 1993).
284.
Slaughter, T. P. The Whiskey Rebellion: frontier epilogue to the American Revolution. vol. Oxford University Press paperback (Oxford University Press, 1988).
285.
Lecture Series | Liberalism in the Americas. http://liberalism-in-americas.blogs.sas.ac.uk/category/events/lecture-series/.
286.
Wood, G. S. The radicalism of the American Revolution. (Alfred A. Knopf, 1992).
287.
Freeman, J. B. Affairs of honor: national politics in the New Republic. (Yale University Press, 2001).
288.
Appleby, J. Capitalism and a new social order: the Republican vision of the 1790’s. vol. Anson G. Phelps lectureship on early American history (New York University Press, 1984).
289.
Kerber, L. K. Federalists in dissent: imagery and ideology in Jeffersonian America. (Cornell University Press, 1970).
290.
Kann, M. E. A Republic of Men: The American Founders, Gendered Language, and Patriarchal Politics. (NYU Press, 1998).
291.
Journal of the Early Republic on JSTOR. (1981).
292.
Jaksic, I. The Hispanic world and American intellectual life, 1820-1880. vol. Studies of the Americas (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
293.
Langley, L. D. The Americas in the age of revolution, 1750-1850. (Yale University Press, 1996).
294.
Gargarella, R. The legal foundations of inequality: constitutionalism in the Americas, 1776-1860. vol. Cambridge studies in the theory of democracy (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
295.
Chambers, S. C. & Chasteen, J. C. Latin American independence: an anthology of sources. (Hackett Pub. Co, 2010).
296.
Wood, J. A. Problems in Modern Latin American History: Sources and Interpretations. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2013).
297.
Independence primary sources (Slatta website).
298.
Chasteen, J. C. Americanos: Latin America’s struggle for independence. vol. Pivotal moments in world history (Oxford University Press, 2009).
299.
Jeremy Adelman. An Age of Imperial Revolutions. The American Historical Review 113, 319–340 (2008).
300.
Brian R. Hamnett. Process and Pattern: A Re-Examination of the Ibero-American Independence Movements, 1808-1826. Journal of Latin American Studies 29, 279–328 (1997).
301.
Rebecca Earle. Creole Patriotism and the Myth of the ‘Loyal Indian’. Past & Present 125–145 (2001).
302.
The Language of Liberation: Slave Voices in the Wars of Independence. Hispanic American Historical Review 82, 499–523 (2002).
303.
Graham, R. Independence in Latin America: contrasts and comparisons. vol. Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long series in Latin American and Latino art and culture (University of Texas Press, 2013).
304.
Lynch, J. The Spanish American revolutions 1808-1826. vol. Revolutions in the modern world (Norton, 1986).
305.
Rodríguez O., J. E. The independence of Spanish America. vol. Cambridge Latin American studies (Cambridge University Press, 1998).
306.
Davies, C., Owen, H. & Brewster, C. South American Independence: Gender, Politics, Text. vol. Liverpool Latin American Studies, 7 (Liverpool University Press, 2006).
307.
War and Independence in Spanish America, 1810-26, Anthony McFarlane. (8AD).
308.
Lasso, M. Under the Flags of Freedom: Slave Soldiers and the Wars of Independence in Spanish South America. Slavery & Abolition 31, 302–304 (2010).
309.
Costeloe, M. P. Response to revolution: imperial Spain and the Spanish American revolutions 1810-1840. vol. Cambridge Iberian and Latin American studies (Cambridge University Press, 1986).
310.
Cussen, A. Bello and Bolívar: poetry and politics in the Spanish American Revolution. vol. Cambridge studies in Latin American and Iberian literature (Cambridge University Press, 2009).
311.
Domínguez, J. I. Insurrection or loyalty: the breakdown of the Spanish American Empire. (Harvard University Press, 1980).
312.
Bolívar, S., Fornoff, F. H. & Bushnell, D. El Libertador: writings of Simón Bolívar. vol. Library of Latin America (Oxford University Press, 2003).
313.
Harvey, R. Liberators: Latin America’s struggle for independence, 1810-1830. (John Murray, 2000).
314.
Archer, C. I. The Wars of Independence in Spanish America. vol. Jaguar books on Latin America (Scholarly Resources, 2000).
315.
Edited by Jose C. Moya. Independence in Latin America. in The Oxford Handbook of Latin American History.
316.
World History Connected | Vol. 7 No. 1 | Nicola Foote: Manuela Saenz and the Independence of South America. http://worldhistoryconnected.press.illinois.edu/7.1/foote.html.
317.
The Spanish American Independence: The British Connection - The origins of the independence movement in Spanish America.
318.
Wars of Spanish American Independence. in Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History.
319.
McFarlane, A. War and independence in Spanish America. (Routledge, 2014).
320.
Walker, C. F. The Patriotic Society: Discussions and Omissions about Indians in the Peruvian War of Independence. The Americas 55, (1998).
321.
McFarlane, A. Identity, Enlightenment and Political Dissent in Late Colonial Spanish America. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 8, (1998).
322.
Arana, M. Bol�ivar: American liberator. (Phoenix, 2014).
323.
Bessel, R., Guyatt, N. & Rendall, J. War, Empire and Slavery, 1770-1830. vol. War, Culture and Society, 1750-1850 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
324.
Piero Gleijeses. The Limits of Sympathy: The United States and the Independence of Spanish America. Journal of Latin American Studies 24, 481–505 (1992).
325.
Brown, Christopher Leslie      Morgan, Philip D.      Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition. Arming Slaves : From Classical Times to the Modern Age. (Yale University Press, 2006).
326.
Armitage, D. & Subrahmanyam, S. The age of revolutions in global context, c. 1760-1840. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
327.
Landers, J. Atlantic Creoles in the age of revolutions. (Harvard University Press, 2010).
328.
Racine, K. Francisco de Miranda, a transatlantic life in the Age of Revolution. vol. Latin American silhouettes (Scholarly Resources, 2003).
329.
Armitage, D. The declaration of independence: a global history. (Harvard University Press, 2007).
330.
Bayly, C. A. The birth of the modern world, 1780-1914: global connections and comparisons. vol. The Blackwell history of the world (Blackwell, 2004).
331.
Brown, M. The Struggle for Power in Post-Independence Colombia and Venezuela. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
332.
The US and Spanish American Revolutions | The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. http://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-by-era/age-jefferson-and-madison/essays/us-and-spanish-american-revolutions.
333.
Liberties and Empires: Writing Constitutions in the Atlantic World, 1776-1848. (24AD).
334.
Langley, L. D. The Americas in the age of revolution, 1750-1850. (Yale University Press, 1996).
335.
Wood, J. A. Problems in Modern Latin American History: Sources and Interpretations. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2013).
336.
Castro Speech Database - LANIC.
337.
Cuba Documentation Project.
338.
Primary Sources on Revolution II: Slatta.
339.
Martínez-Fernández, L. Revolutionary Cuba: A History. (University Press of Florida, 2014).
340.
Lievesley, G. The Cuban Revolution: past, present and future perspectives. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004).
341.
Guerra, L. Visions of Power in Cuba: Revolution, Redemption, and Resistance, 1959-1971. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2012).
342.
Castro Mariño, S. M. & Pruessen, R. W. Fifty Years of Revolution: Perspectives on Cuba, the United States and the World. vol. Contemporary Cuba (University Press of Florida, 2012).
343.
Roy, J. The Cuban revolution (1959-2009): Relations with Spain, the European Union, and the United States. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).
344.
Farber, S. The origins of the Cuban Revolution reconsidered. vol. Envisioning Cuba (University of North Carolina Press, 2006).
345.
Wright, T. C. Latin America in the era of the Cuban Revolution. (Praeger, 2001).
346.
Schoultz, L. That infernal little Cuban republic: the United States and the Cuban Revolution. (University of North Carolina Press, 2009).
347.
Paterson, T. G. Contesting Castro: the United States and the triumph of the Cuban Revolution. (Oxford University Press, 1994).
348.
de la Fuente, Alejandro. Envisioning Cuba : A Nation for All : Race, Inequality, and Politics in Twentieth-Century Cuba (1). (The University of North Carolina Press, 2011).
349.
Kapcia, A. Revolution, the Intellectual and a Cuban Identity: The Long Tradition. Bulletin of Latin American Research 1, (1982).
350.
Piero Gleijeses. Ships in the Night: The CIA, the White House and the Bay of Pigs. Journal of Latin American Studies 27, 1–42 (1995).
351.
Morris H. Morley. The U.S. Imperial State in Cuba 1952-1958: Policymaking and Capitalist Interests. Journal of Latin American Studies 14, 143–170 (1982).
352.
Sweig, J. & Sweig, J. E. Inside the Cuban Revolution: Fidel Castro and the Urban Underground.
353.
Alan Dye and Richard Sicotte. The U.S. Sugar Program and the Cuban Revolution. The Journal of Economic History 64, 673–704 (2004).
354.
Gonzalez, E. & José Martí and the Cuban Revolution Retraced. J́ose Márti and the Cuban Revolution Retraced: proceedings of a conference held at the University of California, Los Angeles, March 1-2 1985. vol. UCLA Latin American studies.
355.
López Segrera, F. & Olavarría, M. The United States and Cuba: from closest enemies to distant friends. vol. Latin American Perspectives in the Classroom (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017).
356.
Pettina, V. The shadows of Cold War over Latin America: the US reaction to Fidel Castro’s nationalism, 1956-59. Cold War History 1–1 (2010) doi:10.1080/14682741003686115.
357.
Gleijeses, P. Conflicting Missions: Havana, Washington, and Africa, 1959-1976. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2002).
358.
Chomsky, A. A History of the Cuban Revolution. (Wiley, 2015).
359.
Monroe Doctrine: Primary Documents of American History (Virtual Programs & Services, Library of Congress). http://www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/ourdocs/Monroe.html.
360.
Rodó, J. E. & Brotherston, G. Ariel. (Cambridge University Press, 1967).
361.
Martí, J., Shnookal, D. & Muñiz, M. José Martí reader: writings on the Americas. (Ocean Press, 2007).
362.
Martí, J. & Foner, P. S. Inside the monster: writings on the United States and American imperialism. (Monthly Review Press, 1975).
363.
Ramírez, M. C. & Gaztambide, M. C. Resisting categories: Latin American and/or Latino? vol. v. I (Museum Fine Arts Houston, International Center for the Arts of the Americas, 2012).
364.
Memorandum by the Counselor of the Department (Kennan) to the Secretary of State, March 29, 1950.
365.
CIA and Assassinations: The Guatemala 1954 Documents. https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB4/.
366.
Wood, J. A. Problems in Modern Latin American History: Sources and Interpretations. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2013).
367.
Internet History Sourcebooks - 20th century Latin America.
368.
Neocolonialism (1898-1930s) Primary sources: Slatta.
369.
Galeano, E. Open Veins of Latin America : Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent (25th Anniversary Edition). (NYU Press, 19970101).
370.
Colby, J. M. United States in the World : Business of Empire : United Fruit, Race, and U.S. Expansion in Central America. (Cornell University Press, 20111101).
371.
LeoGrande, W. M. Our Own Backyard: The United States in Central America, 1977-1992. (The University of North Carolina Press, 1998).
372.
Grandin, G. Last Colonial Massacre. (University of Chicago Press, 2011).
373.
Brands, H. Latin America’s Cold War. (Harvard University Press, 20120301).
374.
Harmer, T. Allende’s Chile and the Inter-American Cold War. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2011).
375.
Lynch, E. A. The Cold War’s last battlefield: Reagan, the Soviets, and Central America. vol. Global Academic Publishing Book (State University of New York Press, 2011).
376.
McPherson, A. L. Yankee no!: anti-Americanism in U.S.-Latin American relations. (Harvard University Press, 2003).
377.
Taffet, J. F. Foreign aid as foreign policy: the Alliance for Progress in Latin America. (Routledge, 2007).
378.
Garrard-Burnett, V., Lawrence, M. A. & Moreno, J. E. Beyond the Eagle’s Shadow: New Histories of Latin America’s Cold War. (University of New Mexico Press, 2013).
379.
Conniff, Michael L. United States and the Americas : Panama and the United States : The Forced Alliance. (University of Georgia Press, 2001).
380.
Ricardo D. Salvatore. Imperial Mechanics: South America’s Hemispheric Integration in the Machine Age. American Quarterly 58, 662–691 (2006).
381.
Dalia Antonia Muller. Latin America and the Question of Cuban Independence. The Americas 68, 209–239 (2011).
382.
Zanchetta, B. Between Cold War Imperatives and State-Sponsored Terrorism: The United States and "Operation Condor”. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 1–19 (2016) doi:10.1080/1057610X.2016.1159069.
383.
LaFeber, W. Inevitable revolutions: the United States in Central America. (Norton, 1993).
384.
J. Patrice McSherry. Tracking the Origins of a State Terror Network: Operation Condor. Latin American Perspectives 29, 38–60 (2002).
385.
J. Patrice McSherry. Operation Condor: Clandestine Inter-American System. Social Justice 26, 144–174 (1999).
386.
Smith, P. H. Talons of the eagle: dynamics of U.S.-Latin American relations. (Oxford University Press, 1996).
387.
Carter, Dale, D. & Clifton, R. War and Cold War in American Foreign Policy, 1942-62. vol. Cold War History (Palgrave Macmillan, 2001).
388.
Pérez, L. A. Cuba and the United States: ties of singular intimacy. vol. United States and the Americas (University of Georgia Press, 2003).
389.
Pérez Jr, L. A. The War of 1898: The United States and Cuba in  History and Historiography. (The University of North Carolina Press, 1998).
390.
Perez, L. A. Incurring a Debt of Gratitude: 1898 and the Moral Sources of United States Hegemony in Cuba. The American Historical Review 104, (1999).
391.
Abel, C. & Lewis, C. M. Latin America, economic imperialism and the state: the political economy of the external connection from independence to the present. vol. Monographs / University of London, Institute of Latin American Studies (Athlone Press, 1985).
392.
Berger, M. T. Civilising the South: The US Rise to Hegemony in the Americas and the Roots of ‘Latin American Studies’ 1898-1945. Bulletin of Latin American Research 12, (1993).
393.
Deere, C. D. Here Come the Yankees! The Rise and Decline of United States Colonies in Cuba, 1898-1930. The Hispanic American Historical Review 78, (1998).
394.
Close Encounters of Empire: Writing the Cultural History of U.S.-Latin American Relations. (Duke University Press, 1988).
395.
Schoonover, T. D. Uncle Sam’s war of 1898 and the origins of globalization. (University Press of Kentucky, 2003).
396.
Schoonover, T. D. Dollars over dominion: the triumph of liberalism in Mexican-United States relations, 1861-1867. (Louisiana State University Press, 1978).
397.
Topik, S., Marichal, C. & Frank, Z. L. From silver to cocaine: Latin American commodity chains and the building of the world economy, 1500-2000. vol. American encounters/global interactions (Duke University Press, 2006).
398.
Conniff, Michael L. United States and the Americas : Panama and the United States : The Forced Alliance. (University of Georgia Press, 2001).
399.
Sheinin, David M.K. Argentina and the United States : An Alliance Contained. (University of Georgia Press, 2006).
400.
Loveman, Brian. No Higher Law. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2010).
401.
Smith, Joseph. Brazil and the United States : Convergence and Divergence. (University of Georgia Press, 2010).
402.
Soft Balancing in the Americas: Latin American Opposition to U.S. Intervention, 1898–1936. International Security 40, 120–156.
403.
Kryzanek, M. J. U.S.-Latin American relations. (Praeger, 1990).
404.
¡Américas unidas!: Nelson A. Rockefeller’s Office of Inter-American Affairs (1940-46). (Iberoamericana, 2012).
405.
Niess, F., Drost, H., Mandeau, B. & Fienemann, G. A hemisphere to itself: a history of US-Latin American relations. (Zed, 1990).
406.
LaRosa, M. & Mora, F. O. Neighborly adversaries: readings in US-Latin American relations. (Rowman & Littlefield, 1999).
407.
Gilderhus, M. T. The second century: US/Latin American relations since 1889. vol. Latin American silhouettes (Scholarly Resources, 2000).
408.
Domínguez, J. I. Economic issues and political conflict: US-Latin American relations. vol. Butterworths studies in international political economy (Butterworth Scientific, 1982).
409.
Mark Gilderhus, David LeFevor and Michael LaRosa. The Third Century: U.S.-Latin American Relations Since 1889 (Latin American Silhouettes). (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers; 2nd Revised edition edition, 5AD).
410.
Robert Patrick Newcomb. José Enrique Rodó: ‘Iberoamérica,’ the ‘Magna Patria,’ and the Question of Brazil. Hispania 93, 368–379 (2010).
411.
Reid, J. T. The Rise and Decline of the Ariel-Caliban Antithesis in Spanish America. The Americas 34, (1978).
412.
San Román, G. This America we dream of: Rodó and Ariel one hundred years on. (Institute of Latin American Studies, 2001).
413.
Michel Gobat. The Invention of Latin America: A Transnational History of Anti-Imperialism, Democracy, and Race. The American Historical Review 118, 1345–1375 (2013).
414.
Gonzalez, R. A. Designing Pan-America: U.S. Architectural Visions for the Western Hemisphere. (University of Texas Press, 2011).
415.
Torres, C. R. The limits of Pan-Americanism: the case of the failed 1942 Pan-American Games. The International Journal of the History of Sport 28, 2547–2574 (2011).
416.
Ramos, J. Hemispheric Domains: 1898 and the Origins of Latin Americanism. Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies 10, 237–251 (2001).
417.
Amy Spellacy. Mapping the Metaphor of the Good Neighbor: Geography, Globalism, and Pan-Americanism during the 1940s. American Studies 47, 39–66 (2006).
418.
Anthea  McCarthy-Jones. Somos hijos de Sandino y Bolívar: Radical Pan-American Traditions in Historical and Cultural Context. Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research 17, 231–248 (2011).
419.
Slave Code of South Carolina, May 1740. http://www.teachingushistory.org/ttrove/1740slavecode.htm.