Oil and coffee : Latin American merchant shipping from the imperial era to the 1950s
著者
書誌事項
Oil and coffee : Latin American merchant shipping from the imperial era to the 1950s
(Contributions in economics and economic history, no. 206)
Greenwood Press, 1998
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Latin Americans as sailors? This remark caused laughter among 19th-century foreign observers, particularly British observers. Yet, Latin Americans did struggle to create important merchant fleets, an effort largely ignored outside the region. This book rescues Latin American shipping from oblivion. In a chronological narrative, it presents the most important events in the emergence of Latin American shipping. While focusing on the shipping companies, the book also roams widely into governmental policy, foreign relations, and naval affairs.
Divided into two parts, the book opens with a brief summary of the age of sailing ships, then traces the history of the first steamship companies, focusing on Brazil and Chile until 1914. Part I then goes on to analyze the impact of World War I and the Great Depression. Part II considers World War II and U.S. surplus ships. New issues in Latin American shipping, arising in the 1950s, will be discussed in another volume.
目次
Preface
Acknowledgments
The Beginnings
The Origins
The Struggle to Expand
World War I
The Interwar Years: Brazil
The Interwar Years: Chile, Peru, and Mexico
World War II and Surplus Ships
World War II
The Trinational Experiment
Brazil and Argentina
Surplus-Ship Fleets
Fleets For the Dictators
Conclusion
Chronology of Significant Events
Selected Bibliography
Index
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