Argentina
The European images of Argentina are complex, and mirror profound debates about nationalism and universalism, popular and elite culture. |
Richard Cavendish describes how Adolf Eichmann was captured in Argentina on May 11th, 1960. Published in History Today, Volume: 60 Issue: 5, 2010
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Following his re-election in 1952, Juan Peron was overthrown on September 19th, 1955. |
Leslie Ray argues that politics and football have always been inseparable in the land of the ‘hand of God’. Published in History Today, Volume: 54 Issue: 12
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Federico Guillermo Lorenz shows that those who control the present are sometimes able to control interpretations of the past. Published in History Today, Volume: 54 Issue: 1
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Aidan Rankin examines the struggle of the Wichí Indians of North Argentina who fight back against discrimination in their daily lives.
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Peter Beck looks back on the importance of Argentina's history. Published in History Today, Volume: 39 Issue: 2
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The Argentinian writer Borges described the combatants in the Falklands War as being like 'two bald men fighting over a comb.' But thirty years before, Britain and Argentine nearly came to blows over territory far more remote and inhospitable. Published in History Today, Volume: 37 Issue: 6
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The European images of Argentina are complex, and mirror profound debates about nationalism and universalism, popular and elite culture. |
Peter J. Beck explores how Argentina's claim to the Falkland Islands has involved diplomacy carried on by cartographic and philatelic means for 150 years. Published in History Today, Volume: 33 Issue: 2
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The tango was to Argentina what jazz was to New Orleans. As Simon Collier explains, it swept the world in the pre-First World War era and Carlos Gardel was its star. Published in History Today, 1980
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Nineteenth-century Argentina and the United States shared similar frontier problems, but Argentina had both a northern and southern frontier to defend against Indians.
Published in History Today, Volume: 30 Issue: 1
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Posted June 10 2010
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Byron’s love affair with bare-knuckle boxing was shared by many of his fellow Romantics, who celebrated this most brutal of sports in verse. John Strachan examines an unlikely match. |
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