Title: Human geography of latin America: A BLENDING OF CULTURES
1Human geography of latin America A BLENDING OF
CULTURES
2SECTION 1 MEXICO
3NATIVE AMERICANS AND THE SPANISH CONQUEST
- Many native groups
- Toltecs, Maya, and Aztecs are major groups
- Spanish Conquest began in 1519 when Hernando
Cortés landed - Conquered Tenochtitlán (Aztec capital) by 1521
4COLONY AND COUNTRY
- Mexico became a Spanish colony
- Independence won in 1821
- 1822 AgustÃn Iturbide declares himself emperor
- Mid 1800s Benito Juaréz becomes the first
president of Mexico
5COLONY AND COUNTRY CONTINUED
- Porfirio DÃaz succeeds Juárez
- He was dishonest
- Led to revolution led by Francisco Madero, Pancho
Villa, and Emiliano Zapata - 1917 new constitution adoptedredistributes land
to peasants
6ONE-PARTY RULE
- 1929 Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI)
rises to prominence - Did not tolerate opposition
- Led to corruption
- Ousted in 1997
- 2000 Vicente Fox becomes first non-PRI president
in 71 years
7A MEETING OF CULTURES
8AZTECS AND THE SPANISH
- Aztecs came from northern Mexico
- C. 1200 A.D. Settled in Tenochtitlán in Lake
Texcoco - Performed human sacrifices
- 1521 Cortés destroys Tenochtitlan and builds
Mexico City on top
9AZTECS AND SPANISH CONTINUED
- Spanish brought language, Catholicism
- Mestizos people of mixed Spanish and Native
American heritage
10MEXICAN PAINTERS
- Painting became public art
- Large murals on public buildings
- Famous artists José Orozco, Diego Rivera, David
Siquerios, and Juan OGorman, Frida Kahlo
11ECONOMICS
12OIL AND MANUFACTURING
- Large oil reserves
- Manufacturing is the most important
- Maquiladoras factories that assemble imported
materials into finished products that are then
exported - Many are companies from the U.S.
13NAFTA
- North American Free Trade Agreement
- 1994
- Goal eliminate trade and investment barriers
between Mexico, U.S., and Canada
14EMIGRATION, WORK, AND SCHOOL
- 2000 mile border with the U.S.
- Many leave to search for work
- Many uneducated in Mexico
15SECTION 2 CENTRAL AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
16MAYA INFLUENCE
- Mayans built cities in present-day Belize,
Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras - Central city was Tikal, in northern Guatemala
17SPANISH IN CENTRAL AMERICA
- Spain ruled Central America until the 19th
century - Mexico ruled it until 1823
- United Provinces of Central America declared
independence from Mexico - Late 1830s UPCA split into El Salvador,
Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Guatemala, and Honduras
18CARIBBEAN INFLUENCES
- 1492 Columbus reaches Caribbean islands
- Called natives Los Indios
- They were the Taino
- Spanish settled and set up sugar plantations
- Used Taino as slave---many died of disease and
abuse
19CARIBBEAN INFLUENCES CONTINUED
- African slaves were brought to replace Taino
- The Caribbean today is heavily influenced by
African life and culture
20COLONIAL MOSAIC
- By 19th century, Spanish, French, Dutch, British,
and Danish all had Caribbean claims - They relied on sugar
- This brought more and more African slaves
21CARIBBEAN INDEPENDENCE
- 1790s Haiti becomes first independence movement
in Latin America - Slave revolt led by Toussaint LOuverture
- Won in 1804
- Cuba independent from Spain in 1898
- Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago in 1962 from
Britain
22CULTURE OF CENTRAL AMERICA
- 2 major elements
- 1) Native American influence
- 2) Spanish
- Catholicism is major religion
23CULTURE OF THE CARIBBEAN
- Spanish, Dutch, French, British, Danish, African,
and Native American influences - Mix of Catholic and Protestant
- Santeria, Voodoo (Haiti), and Rastafarianism
(Jamaica)
24ECONOMICS JOBS AND PEOPLE
25FARMING AND TRADE
- Caribbean Sugar is largest export crop
- Bananas, citrus fruits, coffee, and spices also
important - Pay is low for workers
- Per-capita income low
- Central America commercial farming
- Panama Canal canal running through Panama,
connecting the Atlantic Pacific Oceans
26WHERE PEOPLE LIVE AND WHY
- Central America Most live in rural areas because
most people work on farms - Caribbean most live in cities
- Hope to find jobs in tourism
27POPULAR CULTURE, TOURISM, AND JOBS
28MUSIC OF THE CARIBBEAN
- Calypso music that began in Trinidad and
combines musical elements from Africa, Spain, and
the Caribbean - Reggae music that developed in Jamaica in the
1960s and is rooted in African, Caribbean, and
American music, often dealing with social
problems and religion
29TOURISM AND THE INFORMAL ECONOMY
- Hotels and resorts are an important industry in
the Caribbean - Informal economy jobs outside official channels,
w/o benefits for workers - Ex street vendors
30SECTION 3 SPANISH-SPEAKING SOUTH AMERICA
31INCA
- Civilization in the Andes (Peru)
- Centered in Cuzco
- Empire extended 2500 miles at height
- Built roads
32SPANISH CONQUEST
- Francisco Pizarro conquers Inca empire
- Harsh treatment of natives
- Inca language Quechua, taken over by Spanish
- Quechua is still spoken today
33INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS
- Began in 1st half of 19th century
- Simón BolÃvar led rebellions for Colombia,
Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia - José de San MartÃn helped to liberate Argentina,
Chile, and Peru
34GOVERNMENT BY THE FEW
- Oligarchy (rule by few) and military rule are
common in S. America - Authoritarian ruleobedience to authority over
individual freedomalso is common
35CULTURAL MOSAIC
36LITERATURE
- Gabriel Garciá Márquez (Colombia)
- Most famous S. American author
- Won Pulitzer Prize for literature in 1982
37MUSIC
- Pop music and folk music
- Music combines Indian, African, and European
elements - Classical music is also very important throughout
the region
38ARTS AND CRAFTS
- Artisan works popular
- Pottery, textiles, glasswork, and metalwork
- Mix of aesthetics and usefulness
39ECONOMICS RESOURCES AND TRADE
- Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana crops for export
- Colombia and Venezuela oil, coffee, narcotics
- Peru and Ecuador fishing
- Argentina grain and livestock
- Paraguay beans, cotton
40CHILES SUCCESS STORY
- S. Americas economic success story
- Rich mines (copper is Chiles largest export)
- Fruits and vegetables
- Associate member of Mercosur an economic common
market that began operations in 1995 (Think of
NAFTA)
41LITERACY IN S. AMERICA
- Higher literacy rates than Central America
- Literacy rate among women is about equal with men
42LITERACY IN CHILE
- Literacy rate is 95 in Chile
- 98 among those 15-19
- Education is highly valued in Chile
43SECTION 4 BRAZIL
44HISTORY A DIVIDED CONTINENT
- Spain and Portugal were competing for colonies
- To avoid conflict, Pope Alexander VI created the
Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) - This divided the world between Spain and Portugal
- Portugal got Brazil in S. America
45PORTUGUESE CONQUEST
- Colonists arrive early 1500s
- 1-5 million natives already there
- Search for gold and silver was fruitless
- Sugar plantations set up instead
- Settlement patterns were on the coast
- African slaves brought
46INDEPENDENCE FOR BRAZIL
- Napoleon defeated in 1815
- Demand for independence
- Petitioned the king of Portugal
- People asked that Dom Pedro, son of the king,
rule the independent Brazil - Sept. 1822 Brazil declared independent
47A NATIONAL CULTURE
- A mix of Portuguese, African, and Native elements
48THE PEOPLE OF BRAZIL
- Only around 200,000 natives remain
- Many immigrants
- They come from Portugal, Germany, Italy, Spain,
Lebanon, and Syria - Brazil has largest Japanese population outside of
Japan
49LANGUAGE AND RELIGION
- Speak Portuguese
- Catholic majority (largest Catholic population in
the world) - 20 Protestant
- Other mix of African and Catholic practices
50AN ECONOMIC GIANT AWAKENS
- Brazil is a growing economic power. It has
abundant natural resources
51AN INDUSTRIAL POWER
- Rich in iron, bauxite, tin, manganese
- Gold, silver, titanium, chromite, tungsten, and
quartz also available - Hydroelectricity
- Large oil and natural gas reserves
- One of the most industrialized countries in S.
America
52MIGRATION TO CITIES
- Large gap between rich and poor
- Urbanization occurs to improve life
- 87 now live in cities
53MIGRATION TO THE INTERIOR
- Capital city of BrasÃlia built in 1957 to attract
people to the interior - Commercial ag in the Cerrado (Great Plains of S.
America) draws new jobs to interior
54BRAZILIAN LIFE TODAY
55FROM CARNIVAL TO MARTIAL ARTS
- Carnival most colorful feast day in Brazil
- Big in Rio de Janeiro
- Samba Brazilian dance with African influences
- Capoeira martial art blends Brazilian dance
brought from Angola
56CITY LIFE IN RIO DE JANEIRO
- Rio is the cultural center of Brazil
- Sugarloaf Mountain, Guanabara Bay, Copacabana
Beach are popular tourist sites - Favelas very poor slumshigh crime rate