
Benjamin Keen (1913–2002)
Author of A History of Latin America
About the Author
Benjamin Keen is professor emeritus at Northern Illinois University, where he taught from 1965 to 1981. In 1985 Keen received the Distinguished Service Award of the Conference on Latin American History.
Works by Benjamin Keen
Latin American Civilization: History And Society, 1492 To The Present, Seventh Edition (1974) 86 copies, 2 reviews
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1913-04-25
- Date of death
- 2002-11-01
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Muhlenberg College (AB | 1936)
Lehigh University (MA | 1939)
Yale University (PhD | 1941) - Organizations
- Conference on Latin American History
American Historical Association
Members
Reviews
This is an exhaustive and exhausting survey of how the Aztec civilization was discussed first in European writings and later in American and Mexican ones. The author starts from Spanish works written right after the conquest and finishes with scholarship published just prior to this book, so the scope is really impressive and I presume this must be the standard work on this subject. However, I also found the broad scope a bit irritating because the author has chosen to include everything he show more can find on the Aztecs, including works of fiction, poetry and art history. For the most part the book is a long list and it lacks the general argument about western worldviews that would have made this collection of snippets meaningful. I also would have liked to see the author adopt a more discriminating attitude toward second-rate works that merely parrot earlier ideas. In conclusion this is a comprehensive work but not really an intellectually stimulating one. show less
Combines new material on women in Latin America and modern developments, including a mounting debts crisis in Latin America coupled with the failure of neoliberal economics, recent government setbacks versus guerrillas in Colombia, and governmental struggles in Mexico, Argentina, Venezuela, and Brazil.
Life of an American who settled in Buenos Aires, fitted out privateers during the Argentine War of INdependence, eventually returned to New Haven and founded a scholarship at Yale.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 13
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 413
- Popularity
- #58,990
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 53
- Languages
- 2











