Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
ARGENTINA, I93O-46
Still among the best and liveliest introductions to Argentina in the period between the revolution of 1930 and the rise of Peron (1943—6) are three English-language books published in the early 1940s: John W. White, Argentina, the Life Story of a Nation (New York, 1942), which aptly captures the puzzled response among North Americans to the apparently hostile attitudes of Argentines during the late 1930s until 1942; Ysabel Rennie, The Argentine Republic (New York, 1945), which remains one of the best general introductions to Argentine history and offers an excellent analysis of the years 1943-5; and Felix Weil, Argentine Riddle (New York, 1944). Weil, a member of one of the 'Big Four' grain-exporting families, argued for the type of future association between Argentina and the United States that Pinedo and the liberals had aspired to in 1940, in which the United States would take charge of industrializing Argentina. If the book contains this thread of wishful thinking, it also shows an extremely well informed knowledge of Argentine society and the issues facing the country at this critical juncture. A more recent general introduction, containing several excellent essays, is Mark Falcoff and Ronald H. Dolkart (eds.), Prologue to Peron: Argentina in Depression and War (Berkeley, Calif, 1975). See also David Rock, Argentina, 1516-1987 (Berkeley, Calif, 1987), chap. 6, and for a reinterpretation of the 1940s, Carlos H. Waisman, The Reversal of Development in Argentina (Princeton, N.J., 1987).
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