Written from the point of view of early 1960's America. Frank Tannenbaum (1893-1969) was an Austrian-American historian, sociologist and criminologist. He was an early proponent of labeling theory... This description may be from another edition of this product.
Latin America, despite being our southern neighbor, remains a giant gap in our knowledge. When Americans think of Latin America, their image is of a number countries that are miniature, less civilized clones of the United States. That is definitely not the case and, until recently, this misunderstanding of Latin America has been one of the causes of our poor relations with Latin America. Frank Tannenbaum's "Ten Keys to Latin America" gives its readers a solid base of knowledge about Latin America to build from and dispels many myths about Latin American countries. Each of ten keys in "Ten Keys to Latin America" is a chapter in the book. His first chapter is titled "The Land and The People." It contains this outdated quote on DDT, "A doctor with a few assistants, goes up and down the river, bringing the benefit of DDT to the river towns." (pg. 15 "Ten Keys to Latin America" Tannenbaum, Frank) Fortunately, this was one of the only times that Mr. Tannenbaum's book seemed that hopelessly outdated. A few pages before, though, his prediction of the size of the Mexican population by the end of the century is right on the money. Latin American countries are radically different from the U.S. Mr. Tannenbaum uses his personal experiences and his vast array of knowledge about Latin America to describe the differences between the U.S. and Latin America. In the U.S. we are connected to people all around the world via the internet and other forms of communication. Even as this is written, live techno music is playing on my computer's speakers transmitted on the internet from across the Atlantic Ocean. High School students in Latin America do not generally have this luxury. "Ten Keys to Latin America" describes Mr. Tannenbaum meeting some Native Americans who had never left their village. The regionalism that develops from this isolation is one of the "Ten Keys to Latin America" and is key to understanding the difficulties Latin America has had in modernizing. How can a country where 95 percent of the population lives in rural areas industrialize overnight? This is especially true when the people of that country do not feel their loyalty to a country but rather to their own town or region. A whole chapter in "Ten Keys to Latin America" is devoted to the hacienda, a remnant of the feudal system. A hacienda is a large almost self-sufficient with a owner or haciendero who rents land to the peons who work it for him. The hacienda "set the tone and determined the quality of Latin American culture during the nineteenth century and until the First World War." (pg. 76) Yet, in "Latin American intellectual life...the hacienda, which is so all-embracing in its influence is, except in an occasional novel, never written about or studied." (pg. 80) Mr. Tannenbaum writes an interesting, insightful and sometimes scary commentary on hacienda life. He tells of an advertisement he saw in an Ecuadorian paper advertising a hacienda with 50 horses and 20 pe
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