INSTITUTO "DR. E.RAVIGNANI"   24160
INSTITUTO DE HISTORIA ARGENTINA Y AMERICANA "DR. EMILIO RAVIGNANI"
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
1917 in Latin America: between pan-Americanism and anti-imperialism
Autor/es:
MARÍA INÉS TATO
Revista:
Bulletin of the Auckland Museum
Editorial:
Auckland Museum
Referencias:
Lugar: Auckland; Año: 2020 vol. 20 p. 93 - 97
ISSN:
0067-0456
Resumen:
1917 was a decisive year in the diverse theatres of the First World War, contributing to the globalisation of the conflict. In Latin America, the entry of the United States into the conflict was the most significant event, which triggered essential developments in the diplomatic, economic, political, and cultural fields. The United States displayed an active campaign to align the countries of the subcontinent behind its foreign policy, led by the principle of Pan-Americanism. As a result, most Latin American states severed diplomatic relationships with, or declared war against, the German Empire, in the context of heated internal debates. This article aims to analyse the impact of the United States? entry into the war on the Latin American intellectual field. It will tackle two main reactions unleashed by that event. On the one hand, it led many intellectuals to support the notion of continental unity under American leadership, reinforced later by the so-called ?Wilsonian moment?. On the other hand, it also gave rise to the rejection of American interference in the subcontinent?s domestic affairs and the revival of anti-imperialism, a vigorous ideological trend that appeared after the Spanish-American War of 1898.