Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Reflecting the Outside World in Everyday Consumption: Material Culture and Identity in Late Nineteenth-Century Urban Latin America

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dc.contributor History
dc.creator Spencer, Eliot P.
dc.date 2016-06-27T19:04:04Z
dc.date 2016-06-27T19:04:04Z
dc.date 2008-12
dc.identifier eprint:345
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71605
dc.description Following the end of the colonial period, Latin America became a thriving market for goods from the industrializing world, particularly the United States, Great Britain, and France. This thesis explores the sociocultural implications of importation into Mexico City and Caracas, Venezuela, situating the flow of commodities within cultural processes. It analyzes how ordinary people in the two cities interacted with goods from abroad. While most studies of this phenomenon focus on elites, this research suggests that they did not comprise the only group to desire, acquire, and display imported commodities. In Mexico City, non-elites could achieve upward mobility by displaying European items. In Caracas, powerful external commercial ties allowed city residents of most classes to obtain foreign commodities and construct their identity by way of them. Thus, people throughout the social strata associated with imported goods, leading to internal and external effects on cultural identity.
dc.description Tinker Foundation
dc.description University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
dc.format 93 pages
dc.format application/pdf
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
dc.relation http://history.unc.edu
dc.rights In Copyright
dc.rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
dc.subject N1
dc.subject HT
dc.subject HF
dc.subject T1
dc.subject F1201
dc.subject JZ
dc.subject D880
dc.subject NE
dc.subject E11
dc.title Reflecting the Outside World in Everyday Consumption: Material Culture and Identity in Late Nineteenth-Century Urban Latin America
dc.type Thesis


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