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Trends in Social Thought in Twentieth Century Latin America
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
Extract
In the twentieth century, increased contact with world affairs and intellectual life has brought Latin America more fully into the general stream of western thought. Rapid population growth and economic development have also brought many changes in society, increasing the tempo of social change and producing such political movements as the Mexican Revolution, Uruguayan Ratllismo, Peruvian Aprismo, and similar revolutionary developments in other countries. A population increase averaging around two per cent annually, and a rise in per capita income more rapid than the average increase in the United States during the years 1869-1952, go far to explain the striking increase in intellectual activity which has occurred. An additional factor of no mean significance, however, has been the immigration of refugee scholars resulting from the Spanish Civil War and World War II.
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References
1 See United Nations, Economic Survey of Latin America, 1954 (New York: United Nations, 1955) p. 3 Google Scholar.
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3 Gerhard Masur, “Miguel de Unamuno”, The Americas, XII (October 1955) 139-156; Leopoldo Zea, Dos etapas del pensamiento en Hispanoamérica (México: El Colegio de México, 1949) pp. 16-17.
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21 México: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1947. Also in English Version.
22 El sentido de lo humano en América, tomo I (Santiago, Chile: Universidad de Chile, 1950).
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24 Ulises Criollo (1935), La Tormenta (1936), El desastre (1938), El proconsulado (1939), published by Botas, México.
25 Among the many books which constitute this discussion of the Mexican Revolution, the following may be mentioned: José Vasconcelos, ¿Que es la revolución? (1937), Blas Urrea (Luis Cabrera) Veinte años después (1938), J. M. Puig Casauranc, El sentido social del proceso histórico de México (1936), Manuel Gamio, Hacia un México nuevo (1935), Alfonso Teja Zabre, Panorama histórico de la revolución mexicana (1939), Moisés Sáenz, México íntegro (Lima, 1939), and Miguel Alessio Robles, Historia política de la Revolución (México: Ed. Botas, 1938).
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30 See especially his Dos etapas del pensamiento hispanoamericano, previously cited, and El positivismo en México (México: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1943).
31 ¿ Y después de la guerra, qué? (Lima: Ed. P.T.C.M., 1946). The essay first appeared in the magazine Hoy, August 1942.
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