Our America

A Hispanic History of the United States

13 January 2015

Description

"Rich and moving" (The New York Times Book Review), here America's Hispanic past is presented with the characteristic insight and wit of a great historian.

Overlooking the significance of America’s Hispanic past, the United States is typically perceived as an offshoot of Britain, with its history unfolding east to west, beginning with the first settlers in Jamestown. In an absorbing narrative, Felipe Fernández-Armesto begins with the explorers and conquistadors who planted Spain’s first colonies in Puerto Rico, Florida and the Southwest in the sixteenth century. Missionaries and rancheros carry Spain’s expansive impulse into the late eighteenth century, settling in California, mapping the American interior to the Rockies and charting the Pacific coast. The nineteenth-century triumph of Anglo-America in the West is followed by the twentieth-century Hispanic resurgence, spreading from the West to cities including Chicago, Miami and Boston. Today’s plural America is the product of its past.

Reviews

"...clever, provocative and often very amusing 'Hispanic History'..." — Literary Review

"...a brilliant, difficult book...There is much to learn, however, and much also to ponder, in this fluent and vigorous plea for a more positive approach to the present and future role of a major group of US citizens." — The Times Literary Supplement

"Triumphantly rescues Hispanic America from obscurity." — The Economist

Also By: Felipe Fernández-Armesto View all by author...

Paperback

9780393349825

142 x 211 mm • 416 pages

£15.99

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Ebook

9780393242850

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£15.99

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