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20241030105649.0 |
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911031s1992----txua-----b---s001-0-eng-- |
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|a 91042454
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|a 0292785232 (cloth : alk. paper)
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|a 0292785240 (pbk. : alk. paper)
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|a (OCoLC)000003043
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|a (udesa)000003043USA01
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|a (OCoLC)24872021
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|a (OCoLC)990000030430204151
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|a DLC
|c DLC
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|a cl-----
|a n-us---
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|a U@SA
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|a F1418
|b .P55 1992
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1 |
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|a Pike, Fredrick B.
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245 |
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4 |
|a The United States and Latin America :
|b myths and stereotypes of civilization and nature /
|c Fredrick B. Pike.
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250 |
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|a 1st ed.
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260 |
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|a Austin :
|b University of Texas Press,
|c 1992.
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300 |
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|a xix, 442 p. :
|b ill. ;
|c 23 cm.
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504 |
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|a Includes bibliographical references (p. [367]-419) and index.
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|a 1. Nature and Its Enigmatic Images in American Lore. Nature in One of Its Manifestations: An Evil to Be Conquered, Reformed, and Exploited. The Mythology of Regeneration in Nature. The Myth of Nature as Beneficent Goddess. Nature Within, Nature Without, and Phenomena of Projection. Worlds Within, Worlds Without, and Myths of Reconciling Opposites. Latin America Assumes Its Place in America's Fusion-of-Opposites Mythology -- 2. Wild People in Wild Lands: Early American Views of Latin Americans. Stereotyping the Other: An Overview of Nature-and-Civilization Images. Nineteenth-Century American Stereotyping of the Latin Other. Sex and Alcohol, and Latin American Primitivism. Anger and Passion, Rebelliousness and Anarchy: More Symptoms of Latin American Primitiveness. Economic Failure and Latin American Primitiveness. Religious "Primitivism" and Latin American "Retardation" -- 3. Latin Americans and Indians: Ambiguous Perceptions of an Alleged Connection. Latin Americans: Potential Saviors of an Unfulfilled Civilization? Stereotypes of the Good Indian. The Bad Indian and the Merging of Indian and Latin American Stereotypes. Indians, Latin Americans, and Massacres --
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505 |
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|a The Civilized and the Wild, and Myths of Death and Regeneration. Latin Resentment of American Prejudices. Frontier Mythology and the Poisoning of Hemispheric Relations -- 4. Our Frontier and Theirs: American Perceptions of Latin American Backwardness. Iberian and Anglo Approaches to New World Frontiers: Underlying Differences? Frontier Experiences and Pejorative Comparisons: The United States and Latin America. Gospel, Glory, and Gold, and Iberian Frontiers. Waves of Frontier Settlement in America, and the Missing Waves in Latin America. Cowboys and Vaqueros and Comparative Frontier Experiences. Indians and Comparative American -- Latin American Frontier Perspectives. African Americans, Palenques, and Quilombos, and Frontier Differences. Comparative Frontiers: Our Racial Purity, Their Mestizaje. Positive and Ambiguous Perceptions of Mestizaje among Americans -- 5. America in the Age of the New Imperialism. The Alleged End of the American Frontier. The American Quest for New Frontiers. Soft and/or Hard Inducements to U.S. Penetration of the Latin American Frontier. The Uplift of Colonials. The Indian Background to Turn-of-the-Twentieth-Century U.S. Latin American Policy --
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505 |
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|a Immigrants, Indians, and Latins: The American Quest to Control the Other. American Racism Intensifies Contempt for the Other. Racism, Imperialism, and American Fairs. Americans at Fairs: The Midway, the White Way, or Both Ways? -- 6. From Arielism to Modernism: Hemispheric Visions in the Age of Roosevelt and Wilson. Arielism, North and South of the Border. Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and Hemispheric Visions. Racism, Once More, as an Issue in Internal and External Colonialism. Modernism's Revolt against Modernity -- 7. The Twenties: Normalcy, Counterculture, and Clashing Perceptions of Latin America. American Breaks in Two. Communism as the New Primitivism Sparks American Divisiveness. New Questers after New Frontiers: The Reemergence of a Counterculture. Counterculture and the Cult of the Natural. Exploring the African American Frontier in the 1920s. Exploring America's Indian and Hispanic Frontiers in the 1920s. Latin America's Lure as an Alternative and Complement to American Civilization. Variations on Arielism Challenged by Waldo Frank's Variations on Modernism. Waldo Frank, Franz Boas, and the Background to the Good Neighbor Policy --
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|a 8. The Quest for Equilibrium with Nature: The Good Neighbor Policy, 1933-1945. The Failure of Uplift. Cultural Pluralism Abets the Rejection of Uplift. The New Deal and the Quest to Live More Respectfully with Nature. Goodwill toward Latin America: Counterculture Values Enter the Establishment. Goodwill toward Latin America: American Music, Classical and Popular. Spanish Republicans Eclipse the Attraction of Latin American Revolutionaries. The Late Good Neighbor Policy: Normalcy Triumphs over Utopianism. Might-Have-Beens in Hemispheric Relations Yield to Old, and New, Realities -- 9. America's Postwar Generation: New Variations on Old Themes. Civilization Cleansed, Civilization Triumphant. Civilization Threatened. Classical and Popular Music and the Reemergence of an Adversary Culture. The Counterculture, the Establishment, and John F. Kennedy's New Frontier. Third Worldism and the Issues of Cuba, Vietnam, and Nicaragua. The Advent of a New Generation -- 10. Change and Permanence in Myths and Stereotypes: Civilization and Nature toward Century's End. The Balance Shifts in Civilization's War on Nature. A "New History" Begins as a Century Ends.
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651 |
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|a Latin America
|x Relations
|z United States.
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651 |
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0 |
|a United States
|x Relations
|z Latin America.
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651 |
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0 |
|a Latin America
|x Civilization
|x Public opinion.
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651 |
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0 |
|a Latin America
|x Foreign public opinion, American.
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650 |
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0 |
|a Public opinion
|z United States.
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