Preview

Latin America And Violence Caused By The Conquistadors

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
65 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Latin America And Violence Caused By The Conquistadors
In anthropological discussions it has been said that cultures are never separate, pure objects, but rather are shaped and interact with the forces around them. Latin America is more than evincive of this, but also serves as a warning, with the violence caused by the conquistadors embodied in the construction and language, and the eternal aftermath reverberating in the collective memory of society (Shelton, 2007).

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Cultures are the roots that allow a person to remain grounded and stable, providing a group identity while allowing them to flower into an individual. But what happens when mixtures of opposing cultures come in conflict with imposing societal standards? What form will the culture take? In her book Borderlands/ La Frontera, Gloria Anzaldua uses poetic prose to relate her many years of anger from trying to integrate the clashing morals of her Mexican, American, and Indian cultures. Anzaldua ultimately concludes that for people caught in this clash, decolonization from both Mexican and American society, in order to create a new “borderland” culture, it is a productive and positive step toward psychological health.…

    • 568 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The myth is that the conquistadors conquered the America’s relatively quickly in a sovereign effort but Restall explains that the Spaniards had a lot of help from the Natives and African’s and the “completion” of conquest was anything but; as mass portions of the land remained unscathed by the conquest. Restall effortlessly explains how the conquistador myths of superior communication between the Spaniards and Natives were just as fabricated as the modern misconception of inferior communication by historians. The communication between the two, or lack thereof, fell somewhere between both myths. Restall uses his concise writing style to explain the resilience of the Natives, debunking the myth of Native desolation and how the myth of superiority derives from Eurocentric beliefs of racial dominance which lead to racist ideologies that “underpinned colonial expansion from the late fifteenth to early twentieth centuries.”…

    • 904 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Viramontes directly attacks the systemic and symbolic violence focused on hispanic immigrants. Her story draws deeply upon subtle imagery and hints at racist undertones in even the smallest things. While very little subjective violence actually occurs, the everyday encounters and daily life are imbued with the hate and violence Zizek warns of. Viramontes plays aptly upon the inherent violence imbued in the language system, showing the automatic stereotyping that takes place between speakers. She toys with systemic and symbolic violence and how they act together to inflame hatred and violence. In effect Viramontes study and draws out the undercurrents of violence rife in the United States by focusing on the lowest class of people. Drawing from personal experience she is able to recreate the awful experiences and exploitations common place in these communities. All in an attempt to broaden the definition and expression of these two forms of violence, the “violence that sustains our very efforts to fight violence”…

    • 1082 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Few articles capture my attention like this one did. I found myself evolving in relation to the paralleled maturation of both cultures. Merely sitting on my bed, I developed a detachment from the tendency to contrast my knowledge of culture from the pure consideration of theirs. My affinity for this type of anthropologic study stems from my adoration of travel. Fortunate to travel from a younger age I have been enamored by being dropped in a stew of culture. I have vacationed to European and Caribbean countries with family and tapped into the tourism that runs the world of…

    • 956 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    “Our America” by Jose Marti expresses the Creole sentiment against tyranny; it tells that Latin America is a mixture of different ethnicities and races. They are a good race that respects and admires the superior intelligence, but this superior intelligence takes advantage of the admiration by damaging and ignoring their pure ideals, and their pride of belonging to a beautiful continent. Jose Marti puts an emphasis that Latin America has to wake up and fight for their liberation from oppression.…

    • 522 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Everybody has his or her own opinion about the Spanish conquistadores being villains or heroes, and most classify them as being villains, but if we don’t only look at the immoral side we would see that they also brought some important goods for the growth of the Native Americans civilization. They did do a humongous damage to the Native Americans` population, culture and religious beliefs, but they also brought animals they had never seen, new plant life, and even some new food that the Native Americans hadn’t see or eaten. In a way Spanish conquistadores are both villains and heroes to the Native Americans in both of the Americas.…

    • 931 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The chart suggests the food products they exported to other places. It also, shows the names of the food products. The consequence of imperialism for Asia, Africa, or Latin America is For Asia it brought modernization, for Africa it brought degeneration of its population and resources, & for Latin America it destroyed their culture but brought a new one which was destined for greatness but somehow failed. An example of the consequence of imperialism for the West(United States and Europe)is Prior to the Civil War, many northerners were opposed to acquiring more territory in the west because they feared the spread of slavery .…

    • 104 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Movie Review: Burn

    • 1329 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Charlip, Julie A. and E. Branford Burns. Latin America: An Interpretative History. Ed. Jeff Laser. 9th ed. Prentice Hall, 2011.…

    • 1329 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Conquistadors

    • 1689 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The Conquest of Mexico and the conversion of the peoples of New Spain can and should be included among the histories of the world, not only because it was well done but because it was very great. . . . Long live, then, the name and memory of him [Cortés] who conquered so vast a land, converted such a multitude of men, cast down so many men, cast down so many men, cast down so many idols, and put an end to so much sacrifice and the eating of human flesh! —Francisco López de Gómara (1552)…

    • 1689 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    For the Spanish, the Columbus Quincentennial stirs an ambivalent nostalgia, blending pride and pain. Spain's shining memories of its Golden Age, when the nation stood at the summit of world power, have been tarnished by critics who call the 1492 arrival of the Spanish in the New World "an invasion" fueled by greed and leading to "genocide." In their words, Spaniards hear echoes of age-old malevolence: a body of anti-Spanish prejudices they know as la leyenda negra, the Black Legend, that tarred the Spanish as incomparably savage and avaricious. It created a national image that Spain is still trying to dispel.…

    • 2242 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    One of the ways that the conquistadores imposed their own culture was by eradicating the intrinsic beliefs and lifestyles of the natives and swapping them with their own. The objective behind this was to make it easier to subject the natives into their rule if their old tradition was erased to take in new customs instead. There are two questions that this analysis aims to answer: Were the Spaniards successful in completely replacing the native culture with their own? Was it right for them to impose their own culture on a people?…

    • 2997 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    How to Tame a Wild Tongue

    • 899 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In the essay by Gloria Anzaldua, How to Tame a Wild Tongue, Anzaldua provides us with her story of oppression. As a Spanish-speaking individual brought up in an American education system, she was hard-pressed by her teachers to forget her roots and adapt to an American way of thinking and speaking. Although she identified directly with Mexican culture and traditions, she saw the North American influences invading the roots of her identity. In her opinion this influence was unacceptable. She describes this way of living as a “borderland” or a place “where two or more cultures edge each other, where people of different races occupy the same territory, where under, lower, middle, and upper classes touch, where the space between two individuals shrinks with intimacy.”…

    • 899 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The conquest of Spanish conquistadors was greatly influenced by the negative effects of the diseases they brought from Europe. The major diseases brought by the Spanish included the common Flu, smallpox and Typhus. These diseases wreaked havoc on the Aztec societies, and decimated the population by approximately 70 percent. This was incredibly important to the Spanish as It weakened the Aztecs to a point where trying to amass an army of sick and dying people would have been pointless. Making it easier for the well-armed and healthy Spanish to crush the Aztec’s resistance. At first the Spanish were unaware of the damage the diseases would cause, armed with the knowledge that the previously un-exposed Aztecs were highly susceptible to becoming…

    • 168 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Foreign Affairs November/December 2000 states: Born in Blood and Fire is a briskly written yet sophisticated introduction to Latin America that will be greatly welcomed by non-specialists and experts alike. Chasteen paints on a very broad canvas, but he succeeds in capturing with enviable conciseness the major ingredients of Latin America's uniqueness and complexity. Especially welcome is his graceful integration of Brazil into the overall picture, which general histories of Latin America often lack. He first takes the reader from the European conquest through the colonial consolidation by Spain and Portugal before looking at the role of indigenous communities in the new order imposed by the Europeans and African slavery's social and cultural consequences. He then follows with the independence movements and the uneven attempts at nation-building in the nineteenth century; race, ethnicity, religious and liberal ideologies, and the roles of key individuals are also covered. Chasteen concludes with the recent return to economic liberalism, this time in the context of open elections, continuing poverty, and social exclusion of large segments of the population. A stellar performance!…

    • 1991 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Best Essays

    testimonio

    • 4205 Words
    • 12 Pages

    History is not a single, linear truth or perspective, but rather it is made up of a collage of interpretations, memories, experiences, and analyses. In the recent decades in Latin America, testimonial literature has immerged as a popular form of such collective expression and ideology. This form of narrative emerges from the need to create social awareness and consciousness to exploitation, mistreatment, and oppression faced by the marginalized groups of a society. Unlike a master narrative, which boldly makes universal claims about the experience, treatment, and situations of the “voiceless” in a community, these personal testimonies, do not attempt to make claims for or represent a community. However, the speakers do believe that there are many others within their community who have experienced or can relate to similar atrocities, and their hope is that their narratives will function as a way to bring about social awareness and change. Therefore, through personal narratives, the speaker “performs an act of identity-formation which is simultaneously personal and collective”.1Essentially, these testimonialistas portray their experiences as an agent for collective memory and identity.…

    • 4205 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Best Essays