1 / 22

MIDDLE AMERICA I (chapter 4: 197-216)

MIDDLE AMERICA I (chapter 4: 197-216). INTRODUCTION TO MIDDLE AMERICA. DEFINING THE REALM MEXICO, CENTRAL AMERICA, CARIBBEAN ISLANDS MAJOR GEOGRAPHIC QUALITIES FRAGMENTED - PHYSICALLY AND POLITICALLY DIVERSE CULTURALLY POVERTY IS ENDEMIC. REGIONS OF MIDDLE AMERICA. Greater Antilles.

tanith
Télécharger la présentation

MIDDLE AMERICA I (chapter 4: 197-216)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MIDDLE AMERICA I(chapter 4: 197-216)

  2. INTRODUCTION TO MIDDLE AMERICA • DEFINING THE REALM • MEXICO, CENTRAL AMERICA, CARIBBEAN ISLANDS • MAJOR GEOGRAPHIC QUALITIES • FRAGMENTED - PHYSICALLY AND POLITICALLY • DIVERSE CULTURALLY • POVERTY IS ENDEMIC

  3. REGIONS OF MIDDLE AMERICA Greater Antilles Mexico LesserAntilles Central America

  4. MIDDLE AMERICA

  5. PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY • LAND BRIDGE • ARCHIPELAGO • GREATER AND LESSER ANTILLES • NATURAL HAZARDS • EARTHQUAKES • VOLCANOES • HURRICANES I wonder why?

  6. WORLD TECTONIC PLATES

  7. DISTRIBUTION OF EARTHQUAKES & VOLCANOES

  8. WORLD HURRICANE TRACKS

  9. CULTURE HEARTH • SOURCE AREAS from which radiated ideas, innovations, and ideologies that changed the world beyond. MA Hearths Aztecs Mayans

  10. MESOAMERICA • CULTURE HEARTHS • MAYA CIVILIZATION • 3000 BP • CLASSIC PERIOD 200-900 AD • HONDURAS, GUATEMALA, BELIZE, YUCATAN PENINSULA • THEOCRATIC STRUCTURE • AZTEC CIVILIZATION • 1300 AD • VALLEY OF MEXICO • TENOCHTITLAN (>100,000 PEOPLE)

  11. COLONIAL HERITAGE SPAIN FRANCE BRITAIN

  12. THE LEGACY OF COLONIALISM • Land was appropriated - colonial commercial interests • Lands devoted to food crops for local consumption were convertedto cash croppingfor export • Land Alienationinduces: • Famine • Poverty • Migration • Little agricultural diversity

  13. COLONIAL SPHERES

  14. MAINLAND/RIMLAND FRAMEWORK • MAINLAND • EURO-INDIAN INFLUENCE • GREATER ISOLATION • HACIENDA PREVAILED • RIMLAND • EURO-AFRICAN INFLUENCE • HIGH ACCESSIBILITY • PLANTATION ECONOMY

  15. MAINLAND – RIMLAND DISTINCTION

  16. MAINLAND vs RIMLAND MAINLAND RIMLAND Location greater isolation greater accessibility Climate altitudinal tropical zonation Physiographymountains islands Culture Euro/Indian African-European RaceMestizoMulatto Landholding Patterns haciendas plantation

  17. HACIENDA vs PLANTATION • HACIENDA • SPANISH INSTITUTION • NOT EFFICIENT BUT SOCIAL PRESTIGE • WORKERS LIVED ON THE LAND • PLANTATION • NORTHERN EUROPEAN ORIGINS • EXPORT ORIENTED MONOCROPS • IMPORTED CAPITAL AND SKILLS • SEASONAL LABOR • EFFICIENCY IS KEY

  18. AGRICULTURAL INSTITUTIONS Plantation • Production for export • Single cash crop • Seasonal Employment • Profit motive $$$ • Market Vulnerability

  19. AGRICULTURAL INSTITUTIONS Plantation Hacienda • Production for export • Single cash crop • Seasonal Employment • Profit motive $$$ • Market Vulnerability • Domestic market • Diversified Crops • Year round jobs • Small plot of land • Self-sufficient

  20. AGRICULTURAL INSTITUTIONS Plantation Hacienda • Production for export • Single cash crop • Seasonal Employment • Profit motive $$$ • Market Vulnerability • Domestic market • Diversified Crops • Year round jobs • Small plot of land • Self-sufficient Ejido • Small surpluses • Land “ownership” • Communal village • Collective

  21. MIDDLE AMERICA I(chapter 4: 197-216)

More Related