The Oxford Handbook of Latin American History is a reference work, primarily of historiography, with narrative discussions of publications on particular topics with select bibliography.
Essays analyze the recent historiography, periodization, themes and trends in the field. Essays are by region and theme. The articles include treatment of both Spanish America and Brazil. They include: âÂÂHistoriography of New Spainâ Kevin Terraciano and Lisa Sousa; âÂÂColonial Spanish South AmericaâÂÂ, Lyman L. Johnson and Susan M. Socolow; âÂÂThe Historiography of Early Modern BrazilâÂÂ, Stuart B. Schwartz; âÂÂSexuality in Colonial Spanish AmericaâÂÂ, Asunción Lavrin; âÂÂIndependence in Latin America,â Jeremy Adelman; âÂÂSlavery in Brazil,â João Reis and Herbert S. Klein; âÂÂSlavery in Brazil,â Barbara Weinstein; âÂÂRace in Post-abolition Afro-Latin America,â Kim D. Butler and Aline Helg; âÂÂIndigenous Peoples and Nation-States in Spanish America, 1780-2000,â Florencia Mallon; âÂÂRural History,â Eric Van Young, âÂÂLatin American Labor History,â James P. Brennan; âÂÂGender and Sexuality in Latin America,â Donna J. Guy; âÂÂThe Historiography of Latin American Families,â Nara Milanich; âÂÂThe New Economic History of Latin America: Evolution and Recent Contributions,â John H. Coatsworth and William R. Summerhill; âÂÂDisease, Medicine, and Health,â Diego Armus and Adrián López Denis; and âÂÂPopular Religion in Latin American Histoririography,â Reinaldo L. Román and Pamela Voekel.
The work has been favorably reviewed in a number of scholarly journals.