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Generation of '80

The Generation of '80 (Spanish: Generación del '80) was the governing elite in Argentina from 1880 to 1916. Members of the oligarchy of the provinces and the country's capital, they first joined the League of Governors (Liga de Gobernadores), and then the National Autonomist Party, a fusion formed from the two dominating parties of the prior period, the Autonomist Party of Adolfo Alsina and the National Party of Nicolás Avellaneda. These two parties, along with Bartolomé Mitre's Nationalist Party, were the three branches into which the Unitarian Party had divided. In 1880, General Julio Argentino Roca, leader of the Conquest of the Desert and framer of the Generation and its model of government, launched his candidacy for president.

El General Roca ante el Congreso Nacional (c. 1886–1887) by Juan Manuel Blanes

They filled the highest public political, economical, military and religious positions, staying in power through electoral fraud. In spite of the growing political opposition, led by the Radical Civic Union (UCR) and anarchist and socialist groups workers formed mainly by immigrant workers, the Generation of '80 managed to stay in power until the passing of the Sáenz Peña Law of secret, universal, and obligatory male suffrage, thus marking the transition into modern Argentine history.

Ideology edit

The Generation of '80 continued the work of the "Historical Presidencies" of Mitre, Sarmiento, and Avellaneda, and took advantage of the end of the political crises and economic turbulence that had dominated the presidency of Avellaneda. The end of this turmoil laid the foundation for a society characterized by optimism and the certainty of a generous future in the years to come.

The politicians of the Generation of '80 held economically liberal and socially conservative positions, as well as believing in positivism,[1] symbolizing their ideology with Auguste Comte's motto, "Order and Progress." The leaders of this generation believed blindly in "progress," identifying it as economic growth and modernization; "order" was considered a necessary condition for such progress, since it must be under conditions of peace that the people achieve progress.[2] Similarly, the actions of Julio A. Roca's presidencies were founded in the motto "Peace and Administration," synthesizing both liberal and conservative thinking.[3]

Throughout almost its entire existence, the men of the Generation of '80 believed in a destiny of indefinite progress for its country and for humanity. They hoped to see their country grow in all aspects: economically, socially, culturally, and materially.[4] In a certain sense, they did not believe it necessary to do much more than create the conditions for this growth, since they took for granted that progress was the natural response to order.[1] The only time this was questioned was during the Economic Crisis of 1890, but the general optimism returned soon after.[5]

 
Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, author of Civilización y barbarie and key figure in the Generation of '37, later President of Argentina

Ideologically, this generation was considered to be the successor of the Generation of '37, to which their parents or grandparents had belonged – though many leaders were descended from notable characters in the rule of Juan Manuel de Rosas, who was an enemy of the Generation of '37 – and they held as dogma the principles laid out by the members of that generation. In particular, they inherited the cultural and racial prejudices from Juan Bautista Alberdi's Gobernar es poblar, the rejection of traditions from Esteban Echeverría's Tradiciones retrógada que nos subordinan al antiguo régimen, and the confrontation between civilization and barbarianism from Domingo Faustino Sarmiento's Civilización y barbarie.[6]

The positivist ideas of the Generation of '80 were notably influenced by the thinking of Herbert Spencer, who adapted Charles Darwin's principles of evolution to the functioning of modern societies.[7] This line of thinking became known as Social Darwinism, a theory synonymous with the phrase "survival of the fittest." Therefore, following Sarmiento's model, Gauchos and indigenous peoples were "barbarians," uncultured people incapable of appreciating the advantages of a civilized life founded in liberal principles that guaranteed the road to "progress." They believed therefore in the need to eliminate this "barbarianism" through "order" in order to strengthen the idea of "civilization," bringing in a European population to pave the way towards "progress." They did not find a moral contradiction between this and the cultural and even physical elimination of the native population, because it was the destiny of the European cultures and races – considered more "fit" for living in the modern world – to prevail over them and eventually replace the "less fit."[8]

They Generation of '80 also clashed with the traditional positions of the Catholic Church and tried to define a separation of Church and State with laws of Civil Matrimony, Civil Registry, and Common Education, the latter of which established mandatory, free, and secular primary education. These reforms demonstrated that there was never a serious attempt to completely separate Church and State, but rather to simply reduce the institutional influence that the Church had on public life.[8] Either way, these measures brought a constant clash with the Church, defended by a small ideological group with in the Generation of '80: the Catholic leaders, such as José Manuel Estrada, Emilio Lamarca, and Pedro Goyena, who questioned the anticlerical positions of their generation's leaders, though they shared their liberal ideas.[9]

Expansion of the economy edit

 
Field in the Pampas region, which produced a vast quantity of Argentine exports under the policies of the Generation of '80

The Generation of '80 brought in an age of economic expansion in the country. They put forth a liberal economic policy of agricultural exportation, which was compatible with the new international division of labor introduced by British merchants,[10] The country concentrated its economic activity in the region of the Pampas with its center in the port city of Buenos Aires, with the goal of producing meat (from sheep and cattle), leather, wool, and grains (wheat, corn, and flax), primarily to the British market, in exchange for importing industrial goods. While 95% of its exports were agricultural products, Argentina imported 77% of its textile consumption and 67% of its metallurgic consumption. At the same time, English capital provided the funding for the majority of Argentina's logistical activities, such as banks, railways, refrigeration, etc.[10]

In 1887, just after finishing his first presidency, Julio A. Roca visited London, meeting with several members of the British government. During his visit, Roca synthesized the relationship between Argentina and Great Britain with the following words:

I am perhaps the first former president from South America to have been the object in London of such a reception of gentlemen. I have always held a great sympathy towards England. The Argentine Republic, which will one day be a great nation, will never forget that the state of progress and prosperity that is found at this time is due in great part to English funding. [11]

Gerchunoff and Llach have estimated that at the beginning of the 20th Century, half of Argentina's GDP was made up of imports and exports.[12] In 1888, Argentina was the sixth-largest exporter of grains and by 1907 had become third, behind only the United States and Russia.[12] The liberal model of agricultural exportation has been criticized from various perspectives for not investing more heavily in the supply chain, especially in the textile and metallurgic sectors.[13]

The model of agricultural exportation was implemented and maintained primarily by the ranchers in the Province of Buenos Aires (called estancieros), who organized in the Rural Society of Argentina, the first worker's union in the country's history, founded in 1868. Using the chant "One Hundred Chivilcoys!" the estancieros were able to block President Sarmiento's plan to hand over lands to immigrants with the goal of establishing a system of farmers' colonies worked by their owners. President Avellaneda cancelled this plan and established the predomination of the estancia.[14]

Nevertheless, the utilization of these liberal free-trade economic policies enacted by the government were complemented by the governing group with a clear support for State intervention in the areas that were considered essential for the social contract, such as education, justice, and public works, and the expansion of State intervention throughout the country.

 
Proportion of Foreigners in Argentina by Province (1914), a direct result of the liberal immigration policies of the Generation of '80

Expansion of the population edit

The Generation of '80 also carried out an unprecedented process of European immigration in Argentina. Various treaties with neighboring countries, such the Paraguayan War put an end to the primary conflicts regarding the country's borders, thus strengthening the control of the national territory and bringing peace to the population, as opposed to the permanent state of war that Europe was experiencing at the time. Argentina's generous and broad policy based on liberal ideas allowed for a suitable promotion of immigration, complying with the provisions contained in the Argentine Constitution. However, this regime that promoted the entry of millions of new inhabitants into the country was partially limited by repressive laws such as the 1902 Law of Residency and the 1910 Law of Social Defense with the goal of containing the expansion of socialism and anarchism.

The enormous population expansion gave rise to workers' movements that began to demand better living conditions, especially working conditions, employing the strike as a tool for social pressure. A quarter-century later, thanks to the public policies implemented by the Generation of '80, the wave of immigration would lead to a phenomenal social movement and that would bring radicalism to power.

Fall of the Generation of '80 edit

 
 
The art from this period featured the social issues of the Generation of '80.[15] From left to right: Without bread and without work (1894) by Ernesto de la Cárcova and The soup of the poor (1884) by Reinaldo Giudici.

During the second presidency of Julio A. Roca, the Law of Residency was passed, which allowed for the immediate expulsion from the country any foreign activists who were against the regime. Roca's brother-in-law, Miguel Juárez Celman, had been overthrown in the Revolution of the Park in 1890, and in 1905, radicalism would return to arms in a coordinated uprising in several provinces. In 1910, on the centennial celebration of the May Revolution, the Law of Social Defense was passed, establishing the preventative arrest of supposed anarchists.

There were also tepid advances in the government to attempt to calm the workers' demands, such as the creation of the National Department of Labor in 1907. Thus, it was conservatism that issued the first labor laws of the era, though they would turn out to be insufficient given the significant development in the labor sector, a product of massive immigration and economic growth.

Facing growing demands of the middle class, constant strikes, and criticism from the press and Congress, the Generation of '80, at the time led by the modernist line of the National Autonomist Party, found it necessary to respond to the new reality and extended political participation with the passing of the Sáenz Peña Law in 1912, establishing secret, universal, and mandatory suffrage for males over 18. In 1916, in the first elections in which the new law applied, the conservative regime lost presidential elections for the first time, ceding power to the radical Hipólito Yrigoyen, who assumed his first presidency with the backing of the majority of the Argentine middle class.

Concept of the Generation of '80 edit

The term "Generation of '80" appeared for the first time throughout the 1920s, and it referred to a literary generation. In his Historia de la Literatura Argentina, Ricardo Rojas gave this group its name in a secondary manner, since the group that would be called the Generation of '80 was called "Los Modernos." The first author to group the authors of this era together with the name "Generation of '80" was Arturo Giménez Pastor, in a work titled Los del 80. While the name was used especially for authors, it also mentioned intellectuals and scientists.[7] Around the same time, historian Rómulo Carbia, in his Historia crítica de la historiografía argentina,[16] grouped together the historians of the period as "Los ensayistas,"or "The essayists." Finally, in two articles appearing in the newspaper La Nación at the end of the 1930s, Manuel Mujica Lainez mentions the "Generation of '80" with its current meaning, though limited to the literary world.[7]

The distinctive feature that the majority of the writers from this time were also highly imaginative politicians allowed this term to extend to politics, but this process wasn't provided much clarity until the mid-1950s, when Carlos Ibarguren referred to the combination of intellectuals and politicians of the era with this name.[17] The term was also used by leftist historians such as Jorge Abelardo Ramos in Revolución y contrarrevolución en la Argentina (1957) and Enrique Barba in a 1959 article, which declared this generation as a direct descendant of the Generation of '37 for its ideas and philosophy. The precise reaches of the term "Generation of '80" as a collection of oligarchical intellectual leaders tied to cattle production, consciously inheriting the ideas of the Generation of '37, came at the hand of David Viñas in Literatura argentina y realidad política: Apogeo de la oligarquía (1964). In El desarrollo de las ideas en la Argentina del siglo XX, José Luis Romero spoke of the Generation of '80 as though it was already a well-known concept by the reader.[7]

From 1970 on, the term would be used in the sense that Viñas gave it, with nuances more or less favorable or unfavorable according to the author's point of view. However, beginning in this period, certain ambiguities arose in regards to the limits of who belonged to this generation and who did not. Identifying the Generation of '80 as the broad period occurring between 1880 and 1916 would include the younger leaders and intellectuals from the early 20th Century, who demonstrated a clearly different orientation to that of their predecessors. Therefore, it would not fit to include them in the Generation of '80. For example, the intellectuals and scientists did not have political ambitions, with very few exceptions.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Bruno, Paula (2009). "Vida intelectual de la Argentina de fines del siglo XIX y comienzos del XX: Un balance historiográfico" (PDF). Historia Política. (PDF) from the original on 15 December 2022. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  2. ^ Various (2006). Fundación Carlos Pellegrini, ed. Carlos Pellegrini hoy: la opinión de estudiantes universitarios. Dunken.
  3. ^ Florit, Carlos (1979). El roquismo. Hachette.
  4. ^ "::: ARGENTINA HISTÓRICA – la historia argentina :::". argentinahistorica.com.ar. from the original on 20 December 2019. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
  5. ^ Fernández, Carlos J. (2012). Las verdades relativas. Dunken. p. 359.
  6. ^ Vazeilles, José Gabriel (1997). El Fracaso Argentino: Sus Raíces en la Ideología Oligárquica. Biblos. p. 13. ISBN 950-786-143-2.
  7. ^ a b c d Bruno, Paula. "Un balance sobre los usos de la expresión generación del 80, 1920–2000." Universidad de San Andrés. Archived 21 August 2007.
  8. ^ a b Sebreli, Juan José (2002). Crítica de las ideas políticas argentinas. Sudamericana. ISBN 950-07-2273-9.
  9. ^ Corbière, Emilio J. (1980). «Liberales y católicos en el 80». Todo es Historia.
  10. ^ a b Gerchunoff, Pablo; Llach, Lucas (1998). «La generación del progreso (1880–1914)». El ciclo de la ilusión y el desencanto. Un siglo de políticas económicas argentinas. Buenos Airs: Ariel. pp. 13–59. ISBN 950-9122-57-2.
  11. ^ . 11 June 2017. Archived from the original on 11 June 2017. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
  12. ^ a b Gerchunoff, Pablo; Llach, Lucas (1998). «La generación del progreso (1880–1914)». El ciclo de la ilusión y el desencanto. Un siglo de políticas económicas argentinas. Buenos Airs: Ariel. p. 43. ISBN 950-9122-57-2.
  13. ^ Gerchunoff, Pablo; Llach, Lucas (1998). «La generación del progreso (1880–1914)». El ciclo de la ilusión y el desencanto. Un siglo de políticas económicas argentinas. Buenos Airs: Ariel. pp. 37–42. ISBN 950-9122-57-2.
  14. ^ Ortiz, Ricardo M. (1974). «El latifundio se afianza en el litoral y se difunde en los territorios nacionales». Historia económica de la Argentina (4ª edición). Buenos Aires: Plus Ultra. pp. 215–220.
  15. ^ Malosetti Costa, Laura (March 2010). . Centro virtual de arte argentino. Government of the City of Buenos Aires. Archived from the original on 16 July 2013. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  16. ^ Carbia, Rómulo (1925). Historia crítica de la historiografía argentina. Desde sus orígenes en el siglo XVI. La Plata: Universidad de La Plata.
  17. ^ Ibarguren, Carlos (1954). La historia que he vivido. Buenos Aires: Eudeba. p. 56.

Bibliography edit

  • Bruno, Paula (May–August 2007), "Un balance acerca del uso de la expresión generación del 80 entre 1920 y 2000", Secuencia. Revista de Historia y Ciencias Sociales – Instituto de Investigaciones "Dr. José María Luis Mora", México DF (68): 117–161

generation, spanish, generación, governing, elite, argentina, from, 1880, 1916, members, oligarchy, provinces, country, capital, they, first, joined, league, governors, liga, gobernadores, then, national, autonomist, party, fusion, formed, from, dominating, pa. The Generation of 80 Spanish Generacion del 80 was the governing elite in Argentina from 1880 to 1916 Members of the oligarchy of the provinces and the country s capital they first joined the League of Governors Liga de Gobernadores and then the National Autonomist Party a fusion formed from the two dominating parties of the prior period the Autonomist Party of Adolfo Alsina and the National Party of Nicolas Avellaneda These two parties along with Bartolome Mitre s Nationalist Party were the three branches into which the Unitarian Party had divided In 1880 General Julio Argentino Roca leader of the Conquest of the Desert and framer of the Generation and its model of government launched his candidacy for president El General Roca ante el Congreso Nacional c 1886 1887 by Juan Manuel BlanesThey filled the highest public political economical military and religious positions staying in power through electoral fraud In spite of the growing political opposition led by the Radical Civic Union UCR and anarchist and socialist groups workers formed mainly by immigrant workers the Generation of 80 managed to stay in power until the passing of the Saenz Pena Law of secret universal and obligatory male suffrage thus marking the transition into modern Argentine history Contents 1 Ideology 2 Expansion of the economy 3 Expansion of the population 4 Fall of the Generation of 80 5 Concept of the Generation of 80 6 References 7 BibliographyIdeology editThe Generation of 80 continued the work of the Historical Presidencies of Mitre Sarmiento and Avellaneda and took advantage of the end of the political crises and economic turbulence that had dominated the presidency of Avellaneda The end of this turmoil laid the foundation for a society characterized by optimism and the certainty of a generous future in the years to come The politicians of the Generation of 80 held economically liberal and socially conservative positions as well as believing in positivism 1 symbolizing their ideology with Auguste Comte s motto Order and Progress The leaders of this generation believed blindly in progress identifying it as economic growth and modernization order was considered a necessary condition for such progress since it must be under conditions of peace that the people achieve progress 2 Similarly the actions of Julio A Roca s presidencies were founded in the motto Peace and Administration synthesizing both liberal and conservative thinking 3 Throughout almost its entire existence the men of the Generation of 80 believed in a destiny of indefinite progress for its country and for humanity They hoped to see their country grow in all aspects economically socially culturally and materially 4 In a certain sense they did not believe it necessary to do much more than create the conditions for this growth since they took for granted that progress was the natural response to order 1 The only time this was questioned was during the Economic Crisis of 1890 but the general optimism returned soon after 5 nbsp Domingo Faustino Sarmiento author of Civilizacion y barbarie and key figure in the Generation of 37 later President of ArgentinaIdeologically this generation was considered to be the successor of the Generation of 37 to which their parents or grandparents had belonged though many leaders were descended from notable characters in the rule of Juan Manuel de Rosas who was an enemy of the Generation of 37 and they held as dogma the principles laid out by the members of that generation In particular they inherited the cultural and racial prejudices from Juan Bautista Alberdi s Gobernar es poblar the rejection of traditions from Esteban Echeverria s Tradiciones retrogada que nos subordinan al antiguo regimen and the confrontation between civilization and barbarianism from Domingo Faustino Sarmiento s Civilizacion y barbarie 6 The positivist ideas of the Generation of 80 were notably influenced by the thinking of Herbert Spencer who adapted Charles Darwin s principles of evolution to the functioning of modern societies 7 This line of thinking became known as Social Darwinism a theory synonymous with the phrase survival of the fittest Therefore following Sarmiento s model Gauchos and indigenous peoples were barbarians uncultured people incapable of appreciating the advantages of a civilized life founded in liberal principles that guaranteed the road to progress They believed therefore in the need to eliminate this barbarianism through order in order to strengthen the idea of civilization bringing in a European population to pave the way towards progress They did not find a moral contradiction between this and the cultural and even physical elimination of the native population because it was the destiny of the European cultures and races considered more fit for living in the modern world to prevail over them and eventually replace the less fit 8 They Generation of 80 also clashed with the traditional positions of the Catholic Church and tried to define a separation of Church and State with laws of Civil Matrimony Civil Registry and Common Education the latter of which established mandatory free and secular primary education These reforms demonstrated that there was never a serious attempt to completely separate Church and State but rather to simply reduce the institutional influence that the Church had on public life 8 Either way these measures brought a constant clash with the Church defended by a small ideological group with in the Generation of 80 the Catholic leaders such as Jose Manuel Estrada Emilio Lamarca and Pedro Goyena who questioned the anticlerical positions of their generation s leaders though they shared their liberal ideas 9 Expansion of the economy edit nbsp Field in the Pampas region which produced a vast quantity of Argentine exports under the policies of the Generation of 80The Generation of 80 brought in an age of economic expansion in the country They put forth a liberal economic policy of agricultural exportation which was compatible with the new international division of labor introduced by British merchants 10 The country concentrated its economic activity in the region of the Pampas with its center in the port city of Buenos Aires with the goal of producing meat from sheep and cattle leather wool and grains wheat corn and flax primarily to the British market in exchange for importing industrial goods While 95 of its exports were agricultural products Argentina imported 77 of its textile consumption and 67 of its metallurgic consumption At the same time English capital provided the funding for the majority of Argentina s logistical activities such as banks railways refrigeration etc 10 In 1887 just after finishing his first presidency Julio A Roca visited London meeting with several members of the British government During his visit Roca synthesized the relationship between Argentina and Great Britain with the following words I am perhaps the first former president from South America to have been the object in London of such a reception of gentlemen I have always held a great sympathy towards England The Argentine Republic which will one day be a great nation will never forget that the state of progress and prosperity that is found at this time is due in great part to English funding 11 Gerchunoff and Llach have estimated that at the beginning of the 20th Century half of Argentina s GDP was made up of imports and exports 12 In 1888 Argentina was the sixth largest exporter of grains and by 1907 had become third behind only the United States and Russia 12 The liberal model of agricultural exportation has been criticized from various perspectives for not investing more heavily in the supply chain especially in the textile and metallurgic sectors 13 The model of agricultural exportation was implemented and maintained primarily by the ranchers in the Province of Buenos Aires called estancieros who organized in the Rural Society of Argentina the first worker s union in the country s history founded in 1868 Using the chant One Hundred Chivilcoys the estancieros were able to block President Sarmiento s plan to hand over lands to immigrants with the goal of establishing a system of farmers colonies worked by their owners President Avellaneda cancelled this plan and established the predomination of the estancia 14 Nevertheless the utilization of these liberal free trade economic policies enacted by the government were complemented by the governing group with a clear support for State intervention in the areas that were considered essential for the social contract such as education justice and public works and the expansion of State intervention throughout the country nbsp Proportion of Foreigners in Argentina by Province 1914 a direct result of the liberal immigration policies of the Generation of 80Expansion of the population editMain article Great European immigration wave to Argentina The Generation of 80 also carried out an unprecedented process of European immigration in Argentina Various treaties with neighboring countries such the Paraguayan War put an end to the primary conflicts regarding the country s borders thus strengthening the control of the national territory and bringing peace to the population as opposed to the permanent state of war that Europe was experiencing at the time Argentina s generous and broad policy based on liberal ideas allowed for a suitable promotion of immigration complying with the provisions contained in the Argentine Constitution However this regime that promoted the entry of millions of new inhabitants into the country was partially limited by repressive laws such as the 1902 Law of Residency and the 1910 Law of Social Defense with the goal of containing the expansion of socialism and anarchism The enormous population expansion gave rise to workers movements that began to demand better living conditions especially working conditions employing the strike as a tool for social pressure A quarter century later thanks to the public policies implemented by the Generation of 80 the wave of immigration would lead to a phenomenal social movement and that would bring radicalism to power Fall of the Generation of 80 edit nbsp nbsp The art from this period featured the social issues of the Generation of 80 15 From left to right Without bread and without work 1894 by Ernesto de la Carcova and The soup of the poor 1884 by Reinaldo Giudici During the second presidency of Julio A Roca the Law of Residency was passed which allowed for the immediate expulsion from the country any foreign activists who were against the regime Roca s brother in law Miguel Juarez Celman had been overthrown in the Revolution of the Park in 1890 and in 1905 radicalism would return to arms in a coordinated uprising in several provinces In 1910 on the centennial celebration of the May Revolution the Law of Social Defense was passed establishing the preventative arrest of supposed anarchists There were also tepid advances in the government to attempt to calm the workers demands such as the creation of the National Department of Labor in 1907 Thus it was conservatism that issued the first labor laws of the era though they would turn out to be insufficient given the significant development in the labor sector a product of massive immigration and economic growth Facing growing demands of the middle class constant strikes and criticism from the press and Congress the Generation of 80 at the time led by the modernist line of the National Autonomist Party found it necessary to respond to the new reality and extended political participation with the passing of the Saenz Pena Law in 1912 establishing secret universal and mandatory suffrage for males over 18 In 1916 in the first elections in which the new law applied the conservative regime lost presidential elections for the first time ceding power to the radical Hipolito Yrigoyen who assumed his first presidency with the backing of the majority of the Argentine middle class Concept of the Generation of 80 editThe term Generation of 80 appeared for the first time throughout the 1920s and it referred to a literary generation In his Historia de la Literatura Argentina Ricardo Rojas gave this group its name in a secondary manner since the group that would be called the Generation of 80 was called Los Modernos The first author to group the authors of this era together with the name Generation of 80 was Arturo Gimenez Pastor in a work titled Los del 80 While the name was used especially for authors it also mentioned intellectuals and scientists 7 Around the same time historian Romulo Carbia in his Historia critica de la historiografia argentina 16 grouped together the historians of the period as Los ensayistas or The essayists Finally in two articles appearing in the newspaper La Nacion at the end of the 1930s Manuel Mujica Lainez mentions the Generation of 80 with its current meaning though limited to the literary world 7 The distinctive feature that the majority of the writers from this time were also highly imaginative politicians allowed this term to extend to politics but this process wasn t provided much clarity until the mid 1950s when Carlos Ibarguren referred to the combination of intellectuals and politicians of the era with this name 17 The term was also used by leftist historians such as Jorge Abelardo Ramos in Revolucion y contrarrevolucion en la Argentina 1957 and Enrique Barba in a 1959 article which declared this generation as a direct descendant of the Generation of 37 for its ideas and philosophy The precise reaches of the term Generation of 80 as a collection of oligarchical intellectual leaders tied to cattle production consciously inheriting the ideas of the Generation of 37 came at the hand of David Vinas in Literatura argentina y realidad politica Apogeo de la oligarquia 1964 In El desarrollo de las ideas en la Argentina del siglo XX Jose Luis Romero spoke of the Generation of 80 as though it was already a well known concept by the reader 7 From 1970 on the term would be used in the sense that Vinas gave it with nuances more or less favorable or unfavorable according to the author s point of view However beginning in this period certain ambiguities arose in regards to the limits of who belonged to this generation and who did not Identifying the Generation of 80 as the broad period occurring between 1880 and 1916 would include the younger leaders and intellectuals from the early 20th Century who demonstrated a clearly different orientation to that of their predecessors Therefore it would not fit to include them in the Generation of 80 For example the intellectuals and scientists did not have political ambitions with very few exceptions References edit a b Bruno Paula 2009 Vida intelectual de la Argentina de fines del siglo XIX y comienzos del XX Un balance historiografico PDF Historia Politica Archived PDF from the original on 15 December 2022 Retrieved 14 January 2023 Various 2006 Fundacion Carlos Pellegrini ed Carlos Pellegrini hoy la opinion de estudiantes universitarios Dunken Florit Carlos 1979 El roquismo Hachette ARGENTINA HISToRICA la historia argentina argentinahistorica com ar Archived from the original on 20 December 2019 Retrieved 14 June 2019 Fernandez Carlos J 2012 Las verdades relativas Dunken p 359 Vazeilles Jose Gabriel 1997 El Fracaso Argentino Sus Raices en la Ideologia Oligarquica Biblos p 13 ISBN 950 786 143 2 a b c d Bruno Paula Un balance sobre los usos de la expresion generacion del 80 1920 2000 Universidad de San Andres Archived 21 August 2007 a b Sebreli Juan Jose 2002 Critica de las ideas politicas argentinas Sudamericana ISBN 950 07 2273 9 Corbiere Emilio J 1980 Liberales y catolicos en el 80 Todo es Historia a b Gerchunoff Pablo Llach Lucas 1998 La generacion del progreso 1880 1914 El ciclo de la ilusion y el desencanto Un siglo de politicas economicas argentinas Buenos Airs Ariel pp 13 59 ISBN 950 9122 57 2 El Historiador Articulos Las relaciones entre Gran Bretana y Argentina 11 June 2017 Archived from the original on 11 June 2017 Retrieved 14 June 2019 a b Gerchunoff Pablo Llach Lucas 1998 La generacion del progreso 1880 1914 El ciclo de la ilusion y el desencanto Un siglo de politicas economicas argentinas Buenos Airs Ariel p 43 ISBN 950 9122 57 2 Gerchunoff Pablo Llach Lucas 1998 La generacion del progreso 1880 1914 El ciclo de la ilusion y el desencanto Un siglo de politicas economicas argentinas Buenos Airs Ariel pp 37 42 ISBN 950 9122 57 2 Ortiz Ricardo M 1974 El latifundio se afianza en el litoral y se difunde en los territorios nacionales Historia economica de la Argentina 4ª edicion Buenos Aires Plus Ultra pp 215 220 Malosetti Costa Laura March 2010 Un panorama del siglo XIX Centro virtual de arte argentino Government of the City of Buenos Aires Archived from the original on 16 July 2013 Retrieved 10 August 2013 Carbia Romulo 1925 Historia critica de la historiografia argentina Desde sus origenes en el siglo XVI La Plata Universidad de La Plata Ibarguren Carlos 1954 La historia que he vivido Buenos Aires Eudeba p 56 Bibliography editBruno Paula May August 2007 Un balance acerca del uso de la expresion generacion del 80 entre 1920 y 2000 Secuencia Revista de Historia y Ciencias Sociales Instituto de Investigaciones Dr Jose Maria Luis Mora Mexico DF 68 117 161 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Generation of 2780 amp oldid 1170418003, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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