Beyond prejudice and pride: The human sciences in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Latin America

Isis. 2013 Dec;104(4):807-17. doi: 10.1086/674947.

Abstract

Grappling with problematics of status and hierarchy, recent literature on the history of the human sciences in Latin America has gone through three overlapping phases. First, the scholarship has reflected a dialogue between Latin American scientists and their European colleagues, characterized by the "center/periphery" model of scientific diffusion. Next, scholars drew on postcolonial theory to undermine the power of the "center" and to recover the role of local agents, including both elites and subalterns. In the wake of numerous studies embracing both models, the way has been cleared to look at multiple dimensions simultaneously. Histories of the human sciences in the complex multicultural societies of Latin America provide an unusually direct path to integration. Moreover, this dynamic and multilayered approach has the potential to address ambivalences about authority and power that have characterized previous analyses of the production and application of knowledge about the human condition.

Publication types

  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • History, 19th Century
  • History, 20th Century
  • Humanities / history*
  • Humans
  • International Cooperation / history
  • Latin America
  • Prejudice*
  • Public Health Practice / history*
  • Social Medicine / history*
  • Social Problems / history
  • Social Sciences / history*