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Yesterday's Soldiers: European Military Professionalism in South America, 1890-1940
Contributor(s): Nunn, Frederick M. (Author)
ISBN: 0803233051     ISBN-13: 9780803233058
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
OUR PRICE:   $57.00  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: February 1983
Qty:
Annotation: Between 1980 and World War II, South America experienced the unsettling first stages of modernization. During this half-century of economic, political, and social change, the armies of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Peru underwent a process of professionalization as European military missions transformed their officer corps into copies of French and German officialdom. In so doing, European officers inculcated their ideals and values, thought and self-perception--their professionalism--in countries historically vulnerable to militarism. Based mainly on a comprehensive examination of European and South American military literature, this study describes the significant contribution of European military professionalism to South American professional militarism. Nunn not only details the workings of the French missions in Brazil and Peru and the German missions in Argentina and Chile, but gives great emphasis to the themes and topics that most concerned the European mentors and their overseas disciples. He demonstrates convincingly that much of their professional literature was based on a yearning for an idealized past, discontent with an unsatisfactory present, and apprehension about a future that might threaten the most cherished of traditional officer-corps principles and aims. The study ends with World War II, yet is makes an important contribution to our understanding of South American history since 1940. The military organizations of the four countries considered here confronted what they perceived to be the major problems of their modernizingnations with solutions learned from their European teachers. Since 1940, they have resorted to "golpes de estado--"most notably the post-1964 institutional "golpes--"in order to impose forcibly some of those same solutions. Thus, despite increased U.S. influence, many of the programs implemented by military regimes in the latter half of this century bear the indelible stamp of "yesterday's soldiers."
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology - Cultural & Social
Dewey: 306.270
LCCN: 82006961
Physical Information: 1.34" H x 5.69" W x 8.78" (1.40 lbs) 365 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Between 1890 and World War II, South America experienced the unsettling first stages of modernization. During this half-century of economic, political, and social change, the armies of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Peru underwent a process of professionalization as European military missions transformed their officer corps into copies of French and German officialdom. In so doing, European officers inculcated their ideals and values, thought and self-perception--their professionalism--in countries historically vulnerable to militarism.

Based mainly on a comprehensive examination of European and South American military literature, this study describes the significant contribution of European military professionalism to South American professional militarism. Nunn not only details the workings of the French missions in Brazil and Peru and the German missions in Argentina and Chile, but gives great emphasis to the themes and topics that most concerned the European mentors and their overseas disciples. He demonstrates convincingly that much of their professional literature was based on a yearning for an idealized past, discontent with an unsatisfactory present, and apprehension about a future that might threaten the most cherished of traditional officer-corps principles and aims.

The study ends with World War II, yet is makes an important contribution to our understanding of South American history since 1940. The military organizations of the four countries considered here confronted what they perceived to be the major problems of their modernizing nations with solutions learned from their European teachers. Since 1940, they have resorted to golpes de estado--most notably the post-1964 institutional golpes--in order to impose forcibly some of those same solutions. Thus, despite increased U.S. influence, many of the programs implemented by military regimes in the latter half of this century bear the indelible stamp of "yesterday's soldiers."

Frederick M. Nunn is Professor Emeritus of History and International Studies, Portland State University. He has published books and articles on Latin American and comparative military-civilian relations as well as Latin American literature and history.