Life In The Argentine Republic In The Days Of The Tyrants: Or Civilization And Barbarism is a historical account of Argentina during the mid-19th century, written by Argentine statesman, Domingo F. Sarmiento. The book was originally published in Spanish in 1845, and this English translation was published in 1868. Sarmiento's work is a critical analysis of the political and social conditions of Argentina during a time when the country was ruled by military dictators known as ""the tyrants"". He describes the country's struggles with political instability, lawlessness, and violence, and the impact these issues had on the development of Argentine society. The book is divided into two sections, ""Civilization"" and ""Barbarism"". In the first section, Sarmiento discusses the progress that Argentina had made towards modernization and Europeanization, including the development of cities, education, and industry. In the second section, he examines the negative aspects of Argentine society, including the influence of rural traditions and the persistence of violence and lawlessness. Throughout the book, Sarmiento argues that Argentina must embrace modernization and Europeanization in order to achieve stability and prosperity. He also advocates for the importance of education and the need to eradicate illiteracy in order to create a more enlightened society. Overall, Life In The Argentine Republic In The Days Of The Tyrants: Or Civilization And Barbarism is an important historical document that provides insight into the political and social conditions of Argentina during a critical period in its history.This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the old original and may contain some imperfections such as library marks and notations. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions, that are true to their original work.
It's difficult to classify "Facundo" written by Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (argentine thinker, politician and educator) in 1845: it is at the same time history, myth, essay, pamphelt and sociological discourse. It was published for first time as a newspaper serial in Chile where Sarmiento was in exile and written against Rosas'dictatorchip in Argentina. The text is influenced by the Enlightment and specially by the romanticism. Because of the romantic influence, it tells Facundo Quiroga's biography since for romantic'stream a "great man" (Facundo in this case) expresses an epoch. This book has the intention of solving an enigma: how independence's revolution in Argentina (1810) reached Rosas ' dictactorship (1835-1852) This drama, product of the revolution, was caused by the combination of 2 elements which shouldn't have been combined: the city, civilization's field, and the countryside, barbarism's field. The book can be read as the city and the countryside were the characters.
An ahead-of-its-time (1830s) analysis of oppression.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 27 years ago
Sarmiento analizes in this book the oppressive political regime that Juan Manuel de Rosas impossed over the Province of Buenos Aires during the first years of the independent-from-Spanish-rule Argentine Republic (then Confederation). He writes this book in his Chilean exile and publishes it by means of short articles in a prestigous Chilean newspaper during the 1830s and 1840s. In this book, a classic of early Latin American History and Literature, Sarmiento *deconstructs*, to abuse of modern terminology, the life and works of Facundo Quiroga, a tyrant of the inland provinces of Argentina, so that we can better understand the true extent, the true abomination being carried out by the other despot, Rosas, in a Buenos Aires proud of its European heritage. Sarmiento describes the way of life -highly influenced by late Spanish colonial tradition- and the almost unreal landscape of the Argentine Pampas (plains). In that landscape and traditions is born Quiroga, the wild gaucho who is to terrify its own people when he becomes an adult. Sarmiento analizes the society's pathologies that make possible for Quiroga to become the head of a tyrannical regime. His method to approach Rosas via Quiroga is, I believe, very effective. Now it is easier to understand how Rosas regime can become a reality on New World soil just a decade after Independence. Rosas, born in a rich family of *hacendados* with strong Spanish tradition and with landholdings close to Buenos Aires of the 1820s, shares with Quiroga an explosive combination of hate for anything that reminds him of his incivility with an appeal that the isolated people of the Pampas can not resist, the appeal of a man who is the best horse-rider, the best knife-fighter and the best friend of the gaucho. Nothing reminds Rosas more of his rudeness than nearby booming Buenos Aires. The rest of the book lists the atrocities, offensive to any civilized person, commited by Rosas once he gains by mean of terrorist practice the *sum of power* over the city; Sarmiento also discusses what freedom means for a society and for the individuals. Summarizing, this book, which paved the way to a more democratic Argentina, is an example of the power of words to fight oppression, and a *manual* to detect before-it-is-too-late the dangers that keep assaulting democratic life in any society at any time.
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