|
Introduction Part 1. From the Banda Oriental to a Republic 1. The Formation of Uruguay in the Regional Context and the Struggle of Empires 2. Trans-Imperial Dynamics and the Making of Independent Uruguay: The Contested Integration of the Banda Oriental into the Atlantic World in the 18th and 19th Centuries 3. Afro-Uruguayans: A Transnational History 4. British Informal Empire in Uruguay in the Nineteenth Century Part 2. Forging Nationality and National Narratives 5. Italian and Uruguayan Nationalism in Montevideo during WWI 6. From Offside to Orsái: Uruguayan Soccer, a (Trans)National Sport 7. Montevideo, Buenos Aires, and the Birth of Tango 8. A Distant Mirror: Populist Nationalism, Democracy, and the Forging of Uruguayan Nationality: 1870-1970 Part 3. Social Movements and Solidarities 9. Liberal Feminist Internationalism in Uruguay in the First Decades of the Twentieth Century 10. "In Defense of Peace and Freedom": Paulina Luisi and Transnational Feminist Pacifism in the 1930s and 40s 11. The Transnational Politics of the Black Anti-Racist Movement in Uruguay 12. Panorama Estudiantil: Mapping Transnational Solidarities of Uruguayan Students in the Early Cold War Part 4. Exploring Cold War Uruguay Transnationally 13. Uruguayan Intellectuals during the Cold War: The Cases of Vivian Trias and Aldo Solari 14. The Secret Services of the Soviet Bloc and their allies in Uruguay during the 1960s 15. "America of Tomorrow: Christian Democracy." Exchanges between the PDC of Uruguay and Chile in the Discussion of the Unity of the Left (1964-1971) 16. An Anarchy for The South: The Uruguayan Anarchist Federation and Third Worldism in the Rio de La Plata, 1956-1976 17. Uruguay and the "Cuban Question": Cold War, Foreign Policy, Social Mobilization and "anti-Castro" Radicalization 18. The Wounds that Have not Healed: the Uruguayan Transition and its Legacy of Historical Trauma |