Introduction

Hello! I am William, a senior Chinese major from Columbus, Ohio.  My focus for my IS is women’s portrayal in film and literature from around mid 20th century until now.  The main focus being on women writers and how they perceive what was happening during the cultural revolution and the rise of the communist government. This was mainly inspired by my love for Chinese films and the 1935 film New Woman.

I decided to take this class in order to gain a new perspective of history that wasn’t European and was outside of Asia.  Having taken Spanish through middle and high school and the first semester of my freshman year, I’ve always been interested in the history of the Spanish speaking world.  I am particularly interested in the relations between the various cultures in Latin America as well as their interactions with their colonizers.

Introduction

Hello! My name is Jack and I’m a senior and a double major in English and History. My geographical focus is Trans-Atlantic history, and my favorite kind of literature leans towards more post modern. I usually focus on imperial powers and how they affect smaller nations, so I took this course with the intent of leaning more about the effects that the British and Spanish had on the local cultures and their erasure.

I want to learn more about the local governments and cultures that came to oppose the ruling empires in the region. I spent my Junior I.S. for history last year researching piracy in the Caribbean so I’m excited to go back and look at how the region changed after studying it in an early 1700s time frame.

Introduction

Hello! My name is Sofia and I am a freshman from Athens, Ohio. I am very undecided about my major at the moment but I am considering history and Spanish. I also still don’t know my career goals but I can tell you that I’m pretty darn good at the classic rock edition of Trivial Pursuit.

I am interested in learning about Latin America because I had an amazing Spanish teacher in high school but most of her experience was in Spain. Therefore, I am excited to learn more about Latin America in order to have a more balanced perspective. Additionally, I have spent a significant amount of time in Mexico so I am especially interested in this area.

Hello!

Hello! My name is Emily and I am a sophomore. I am a declared History major with a minor in education and will add Spanish as another major this year. My goal right now is to become an ESL teacher and continue to learn throughout my life. I hold a position on campus as an ELL peer tutor. I am involved in many of the music ensembles the college offers as a percussionist, so you can often see me around campus wearing a kilt!

In general, I am excited to learn about anything and everything about Colonial Latin American History! Specifically, I enjoy looking at the role gender plays and the family and personal lives of those in Colonial Latin America.

Class Introduction

Hi all, I’m Ben. I’m a senior history and political science double major. My focus in political science is on US national politics. I’m from Carmel, Indiana, a suburb to the north of Indianapolis.

I’ve taken a few classes on Latin American history at Wooster already, but I’m always excited to learn more. Those classes mostly focused on Latin America either during its struggle for independence or afterwards so I want to learn more about Latin America in the colonial era. I am especially interested in learning about the early interactions between the indigenous peoples of Latin America and the Europeans and Africans that settled in the region.

Class Intro

Hi, my name is Yeeun, an English-majoring, History-minoring Junior international student from South Korea. We don’t really cover much of Latin American history on history classes in Korean high schools, so this course seems like a pretty good opportunity for me to explore the personal uncharted territory of history studies as a history minor student. As the professor said we wouldn’t really have to know much about Latin America to begin with this class, which is a GOOD news to me, so yeah, I guess I can be a little bit less worried about not being well prepared before entering this course.

I am very eager to know you guys better as the fellow participant of this course. Forgive me if my language sound a bit awkward to you because, well, English is not my first language. But I still hope that by the end of this semester, I would have learned much things about how the “Latin America” as we know of formed and evolved in colonial and post-colonial eras.

Well then, see you later in class, guys!