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Consequences for Argentina of the War of Triple Alliance 1865-1870
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2015
Extract
As the novels of Machado de Assis make clear, for most Brazilians the War of Triple Alliance against Paraguay in the 1860s was a remote affair which scarcely impinged on their lives. In this respect the impact of the Paraguayan war on Brazil may be compared with that of the Napoleonic wars on the world of Jane Austen. In Argentina it was a different story. The war with Paraguay produced a sense of national trauma and crisis that makes it not hyperbolic to regard it as Argentina's Vietnam. This article seeks to trace the effect of the bloody conflict with Francisco Solano López on Argentine society. To simplify the analysis, the consequences of the war have been considered below under four headings which do not purport to be exhaustive or mutually exclusive: military, political (i.e., relating to the internal politics of Argentina), economic and international (concerned with Argentina's external relations).
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References
1 There is a vast literature on the Paraguayan war and on Argentina’s role in it. Obviously the monumental work by Juan Beverina, La Guerra del Paraguay (Buenos Aires 1921) is fundamental. Any apparently unsubstantiated remarks in the text may be presumed to be drawn either from this work or from the archival collection of President Mitre’s writings during the Paraguayan war, Guerra del Paraguay, being volumes I-VI of the 27 volumes published as Archivo del General Mitre (27 vols. B.A. 1911–1913). This work will be denoted hereinafter as A.M.
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104 For a representative example of the state of US-Argentine relations see Gould to Stanley, 10 April 1868, F.O.6/273.
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