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To browse Academia. Partea a doua a volumului despre preistoria Americii de Sud; nu sunt coautor. Susan Ramirez. Frank Salomon and Stuart B. New York: Cambridge University Press, Lowell Gudmundson. Luis Miguel Glave Testino. Olaf Kaltmeier. The Routledge Handbook to the History and Society of the Americas charts the field of inter-American studies, focusing on the transnational or hemispheric imensions of social, cultural, and political dynamics in history that shaped the different societies and communities in the Americas.
Furthermore, these approaches have illuminated the important contributions of other epistemic communities, especially indigenous and Afro-American, as well as nonacademic actors, especially from social movements and the field of cultural production, for the emergence and constant redefining of key concepts in the Americas. In this sense, it is not the aim of this Handbook to provide a unilateral and homogenous narration of history and society in the Americas from a single perspective.
In contrast, this Routledge Handbook deals with selected key concepts that are widely used in academic and cultural—political discussions in the Americas. These concepts are explored from different geopolitical, disciplinary, and epistemological perspectives. In highlighting the contested character of key concepts that are usually defined in strict disciplinary terms or in regard to specific — often unconsidered — geopolitical standpoints, the Handbook provides the basis for a better and deeper understanding of inter-American entanglements.
Thomas Ward. The nation-forming processes that Ward theorizes feature two forms of cultural appropriation: the horizontal, in which nations appropriate people and customs from adjacent cultures, and the vertical, in which nations dig into their own past to fortify their concept of exceptionality.