Available Formats
Culture and Customs of Ecuador
By (Author) Michael Handelsman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
30th March 2000
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
Sociology
Cultural studies: customs and traditions
Cultural studies
History of the Americas
306.09866
Hardback
176
Culture and Customs of Ecuador celebrates the extraordinary cultural, geographic, and ethnic diversity that has made this small country one of Latin America's most unique. Through this overview of its history, religious institutions, literature, social customs, cinema, media, and visual and performing arts, Ecuador emerges as a vibrant microcosm of Latin America. Students and other readers will learn how Ecuadorian society blends pre-Colombian, colonial, modern, and postmodern cultural forces. The underlying themes of Ecuador's continuous struggles with multiculturalism and national identity are presented with unprecedented clarity. Ecuador is a land of drama and paradox with abundant natural resources and a boom and bust economy that has prolonged dependence and instability. Despite many of the economic and social obstacles typical of developing nations, Ecuador has developed a dynamic culture. This multicultural society comes alive through engaging chapters on everything from history to performing arts. A chronology and glossary supplement the text.
.,."this volume will be valuable to school libraries looking to supplement their reference materials in area studies and cultural studies."-ARBA
...this volume will be valuable to school libraries looking to supplement their reference materials in area studies and cultural studies.-ARBA
Recommended for academic and public libraries.-Library Journal
Recommended for academic and public libraries.Library Journal
"Recommended for academic and public libraries."-Library Journal
..."this volume will be valuable to school libraries looking to supplement their reference materials in area studies and cultural studies."-ARBA
MICHAEL HANDELSMAN is a Distinguished Professor of the Humanities at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. He is the cofounder of the Asociacion de Ecuatorianistas, an international scholarly organization devoted to promoting Ecuadorian literature and culture outside of Ecuador. His research interests include Spanish-American prose, women writers, Afro-Hispanic literature, literary journals, and issues related to national identity.