Good Neighbor Empires: Children and Cultural Capital in the Americas: Critical Latin America, cartea 04
Autor Elena Jackson Albarránen Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 sep 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004709966
ISBN-10: 9004709967
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Critical Latin America
ISBN-10: 9004709967
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Critical Latin America
Notă biografică
Elena Jackson Albarrán, Ph.D. (2008), University of Arizona, is Associate Professor of History and Global and Intercultural Studies at Miami University of Ohio. She is the author of the book Seen and Heard in Mexico: Children and Revolutionary Cultural Nationalism (University of Nebraska Press, 2015), and co-editor of the volume Nuevas miradas a la historia de la infancia en América Latina: entre prácticas y representaciones (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2012), as well as several articles and chapters.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
List of Tables and Figures
Introduction: Children, Empire, and Development in the Americas
1 Children and Youth Mobilized
2 Infantilized Subjects and Governability
3 Children as Subjects, Objects, and Agents
4 Chapter Organization
Introduction to Part 1
1 Los tres grandes y unos chiquitos: Primitivism and Childhood in the Mexican Art Renaissance
1 The Infantilization of Latin America/ns
2 Childhood as a Metaphor for Development
3 Primitivism, Folklore, and the Indian in Modern Art
4 Institutionalizing Hemispheric Aesthetics
5 Conclusion
2 Primitive Geniuses: the Transnational Circulation of Children’s Art from Taxco
1 Guerrero and Vermont
2 A Word about Rescuing Children’s History from the Archive
3 Elsa Rogo and the Transnationality of the Open-Air Art School in Taxco
4 Taxco 1931: Primitive Paradise or Cosmopolitan Hub?
5 Techniques in the Taxco School
6 3,000 Miles from Mexico
7 Little Empresarios
8 Conclusion
Introduction to Part 2
3 Spanish Cubs of the Aztec Eagle: the Niños Españoles and Parenting as Statecraft
1 Manufacturing Public Opinion: the Spanish Civil War Comes to Mexico
2 From Mother Spain to Dependent of the Mexican State, 1519–1937
3 The Orphan Myth and Cardenista Family Metaphors
4 The Living Parents of Orphans
5 Conclusions
4 Tata Cárdenas and the Escuela España-México
1 The Escuela España-México
2 Tata Cárdenas: the Revolutionary Father Figure
3 Battle for Hearts and Minds: Communists and Catholics at the Escuela España-México
4 The Fate of the Niños de Morelia
5 Conclusions
Introduction to Part 3
5 A Hemispheric Family Affair: Washington and the Other Americas
1 Pan-Americanism and the Two Americas
2 The Other Americas Talk Back
3 The PAU’s Division of Intellectual Cooperation
4 Children’s Exchanges as Official Pan-Americanism
5 Pan American Day
6 “We Make Sombreros!” Racial and Ethnic Representations of Latin America
7 “Once a Pan Am-er, Always a Pan Am-er”: Pan Americanism in the US Classroom
8 Conclusion
6 Diplomats of Development: Children’s Exchanges in a Wartime Economy
1 “Acercamiento Espiritual”: Vertical and Horizontal Ties
2 A Tale of Two Roberts: the “Short-Pants Ambassadors” of Wartime Brotherhood
3 Promoting Resource Knowledge about the Other Americas
4 Conclusion
Epilogue
Conclusions: Two Americas, Other Americas, Nuestra América
Archives
Bibliography
Index
List of Tables and Figures
Introduction: Children, Empire, and Development in the Americas
1 Children and Youth Mobilized
2 Infantilized Subjects and Governability
3 Children as Subjects, Objects, and Agents
4 Chapter Organization
Part 1: Artists
Introduction to Part 1
1 Los tres grandes y unos chiquitos: Primitivism and Childhood in the Mexican Art Renaissance
1 The Infantilization of Latin America/ns
2 Childhood as a Metaphor for Development
3 Primitivism, Folklore, and the Indian in Modern Art
4 Institutionalizing Hemispheric Aesthetics
5 Conclusion
2 Primitive Geniuses: the Transnational Circulation of Children’s Art from Taxco
1 Guerrero and Vermont
2 A Word about Rescuing Children’s History from the Archive
3 Elsa Rogo and the Transnationality of the Open-Air Art School in Taxco
4 Taxco 1931: Primitive Paradise or Cosmopolitan Hub?
5 Techniques in the Taxco School
6 3,000 Miles from Mexico
7 Little Empresarios
8 Conclusion
Part 2: Exiles
Introduction to Part 2
3 Spanish Cubs of the Aztec Eagle: the Niños Españoles and Parenting as Statecraft
1 Manufacturing Public Opinion: the Spanish Civil War Comes to Mexico
2 From Mother Spain to Dependent of the Mexican State, 1519–1937
3 The Orphan Myth and Cardenista Family Metaphors
4 The Living Parents of Orphans
5 Conclusions
4 Tata Cárdenas and the Escuela España-México
1 The Escuela España-México
2 Tata Cárdenas: the Revolutionary Father Figure
3 Battle for Hearts and Minds: Communists and Catholics at the Escuela España-México
4 The Fate of the Niños de Morelia
5 Conclusions
Part 3: Diplomats
Introduction to Part 3
5 A Hemispheric Family Affair: Washington and the Other Americas
1 Pan-Americanism and the Two Americas
2 The Other Americas Talk Back
3 The PAU’s Division of Intellectual Cooperation
4 Children’s Exchanges as Official Pan-Americanism
5 Pan American Day
6 “We Make Sombreros!” Racial and Ethnic Representations of Latin America
7 “Once a Pan Am-er, Always a Pan Am-er”: Pan Americanism in the US Classroom
8 Conclusion
6 Diplomats of Development: Children’s Exchanges in a Wartime Economy
1 “Acercamiento Espiritual”: Vertical and Horizontal Ties
2 A Tale of Two Roberts: the “Short-Pants Ambassadors” of Wartime Brotherhood
3 Promoting Resource Knowledge about the Other Americas
4 Conclusion
Epilogue
Conclusions: Two Americas, Other Americas, Nuestra América
Archives
Bibliography
Index