Making a new world : founding capitalism in the Bajío and Spanish North America
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書誌事項
Making a new world : founding capitalism in the Bajío and Spanish North America
Duke University Press, 2011
- : pbk
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注記
Bibliography: p. [665]-683
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Making a New World is a major rethinking of the role of the Americas in early world trade, the rise of capitalism, and the conflicts that reconfigured global power around 1800. At its center is the Bajio, a fertile basin extending across the modern-day Mexican states of Guanajuato and Queretaro, northwest of Mexico City. The Bajio became part of a new world in the 1530s, when Mesoamerican Otomis and Franciscan friars built Queretaro, a town that quickly thrived on agriculture and trade. Settlement accelerated as regional silver mines began to flourish in the 1550s. Silver tied the Bajio to Europe and China; it stimulated the development of an unprecedented commercial, patriarchal, Catholic society. A frontier extended north across vast expanses settled by people of European, Amerindian, and African ancestry. As mining, cloth making, and irrigated cultivation increased, inequities deepened and religious debates escalated. Analyzing the political economy, social relations, and cultural conflicts that animated the Bajio and Spanish North America from 1500 to 1800, John Tutino depicts an engine of global capitalism and the tensions that would lead to its collapse into revolution in 1810.
目次
List of Maps ix
Prologue: Making Global History in the Spanish Empire 1
A Note on Terminology 27
Introduction: A New World: The Bajio, Spanish North America, and Global Capitalism 29
Part I. Making A New World
The Bajio and Spanish North America, 1500-1770
1. Founding the Bajio: Otomi Expansion, Chichimeca War, and Commercial Queretaro, 1500-1660 65
2. Forging Spanish North America: Northward Expansion, Mining Amalgamations, and Patriarchal Communities, 1590-1700 121
3. New World Revivals: Silver Boom, City Lives, Awakenings, and Northward Drives, 1680-1760 159
4. Reforms, Riots, and Repressions: The Bajio in the Crisis of the 1760s 228
Part II. Forging Atlantic Capitalism
The Bajio, 1770-1810
5. Capitalist, Priest, and Patriarch: Don Jose Sanchez Espinosa and the Great Family Enterprises of Mexico City, 1780-1810 263
6. Production, Patriarchy, and Polarization in the Cities: Guanajuato, San Miguel, and Queretaro, 1770-1810 300
7. The Challenge of Capitalism in Rural Communities: Production, Ethnicity, and Patriarchy from La Griega to Puerto de Nieto, 1780-1810 352
8. Enlightened Reformers and Popular Religion: Polarizations and Mediations, 1770-1810 403
Conclusion: The Bajio and North America in the Atlantic Crucible 451
Epilogue: Toward Unimagined Revolutions 487
Acknowledgments 493
Appendix A: Employers and Workers at Queretaro, 1588-1699 499
Appendix B: Production, Patriarchy, and Ethnicity in the Bajio Bottomlands, 1670-1685 509
Appendix C: Bajio Population, 1600-1800 529
Appendix D: Eighteenth-Century Economic Indicators: Mining and Taxed Commerce 549
Appendix E: The Sierra Gorda and New Santander, 1740-1760 559
Appendix F: Population, Ethnicity, Family, and Work in Rural Communities, 1791-1792 573
Appendix G: Tribute and Tributaries in the Queretaro District, 1807 609
Notes 617
Bibliography 665
Index 685
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