Yolombó y su marquesa: antípodas de la noción exclusivista de los estudios nortransatlánticos

Relatively, until the discovery of America, the Atlantic Ocean was unknown to Europe, but in the last fifty years it has become the centre of the Western civilization, especially the north corner of the Ocean, the North Atlantic. This selectivecentre includes at least half a dozen countries, Canada,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Coastal Review
Main Author: Ortiz, Arturo
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Commons@Georgia Southern 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/thecoastalreview/vol4/iss1/9
https://doi.org/10.20429/cr.2013.040110
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/context/thecoastalreview/article/1102/viewcontent/_Ortiz_The_Coastal_Review___Yolombó_y_su_marquesa__antípodas_de_la_noción_exclusivista__Needs_correcting.pdf
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/context/thecoastalreview/article/1102/filename/0/type/additional/viewcontent/ref_tcr2013040109.pdf
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Summary:Relatively, until the discovery of America, the Atlantic Ocean was unknown to Europe, but in the last fifty years it has become the centre of the Western civilization, especially the north corner of the Ocean, the North Atlantic. This selectivecentre includes at least half a dozen countries, Canada, USA, England, France, Holland and Germany. The purpose of this article is to demonstrate that the Atlantic Ocean is more complicated and much larger. La Marquesa de Yolombó is the counterpoint of this notion of exclusion, for three centuries, from the Caribbean sea almost all the wealth of the Spanish empire went to Europe. The North Atlantic Civilization also forgets Brazil and Africa, without the slave trade and the slave labour, such northern countries would not have accumulated the wealth that propelled the Industrial Revolution and modernity itself.