Life in the Argentine Republic in the Days of the Tyrants; or, Civilization and Barbarism
Learn about this topic in these articles:
caudillismo
- In caudillismo
Domingo Faustino Sarmiento’s 1845 book Facundo provided the classical interpretation of caudillismo in Latin America in the 1800s, framing it as the expression of political barbarism and the antithesis of a government that ensures security, freedom, and ownership rights for a country’s inhabitants. Sarmiento’s book is a portrait of Juan…
Read More
discussed in biography
- In Domingo Faustino Sarmiento
…period in Chile, Sarmiento wrote Facundo, an impassioned denunciation of Rosas’s dictatorship in the form of a biography of Juan Facundo Quiroga, Rosas’s tyrannical gaucho lieutenant. The book has been criticized for its erratic style and oversimplifications, but it has also been called the single most important book produced in…
Read More
gaucho literature
- In gaucho literature
…Faustino Sarmiento in Facundo (1845; Life in the Argentine Republic in the Days of the Tyrants; or, Civilization and Barbarism), a classic account of the cultural clash between the Pampas and the civilizing forces of the city. This theme of the clash between the old and the new informed a…
Read More
Latin American literature
- In Latin American literature: Romanticism
…de Juan Facundo Quiroga (1845; Life in the Argentine Republic in the Age of the Tyrants) is arguably the most important book ever written by a Latin American. It was written during Sarmiento’s second exile in Chile, as a political pamphlet against Rosas. But the book, which grew in subsequent…
Read More