Academic literature on the topic 'Walker, William, Dependency. Nicaragua'

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Journal articles on the topic "Walker, William, Dependency. Nicaragua"

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Medaglia Gómez, Marco Aurelio. "William Walker en Centroamérica." Revista Espiga 7, no. 14 (2007): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.22458/re.v7i14.1059.

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La campaña Nacional (1856-1857) tuvo su origen en la presencia de los filibusteros en Nicaragua. William Walker fue el mayor representante de la política del “Destino Manifiesto” de los Estados Unidos a mediados del siglo XIX. Esto se manifiesta en sus incursiones en Baja California y Sonora y más tarde en Nicaragua y sus pretensiones sobre Centroamérica. La llamada “falange americana” encarna los intereses de los estados sureños que pretendían mantener su modelo económico basado en la esclavitud. Walker es un personaje histórico producto de una época y con él se inicia la campaña militar que consolidó la soberanía costarricense y de Centroamérica.
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Ríos Quesada, Verónica. "La épica cercenada relativa a la guerra contra William Walker en las literaturas centroamericanas (1855-1934)." Anuario de Estudios Americanos 77, no. 1 (2020): 255. http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/aeamer.2020.1.10.

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El conflicto centroamericano contra Walker (1856-1857) es el primer germen épico para Costa Rica y Nicaragua. A continuación, se sistematiza la producción literaria alusiva y no estudiada de ambos países (1855-1934). Entre 1855 y 1860, se detecta un pulso épico; sin embargo, se relega hasta 1880 debido a la falta de proyectos nacionales. Entre 1880 y 1934, en Costa Rica, la literatura se supedita a los términos contradictorios de recuperación de la campaña militar. En Nicaragua, se enmarca dentro de una narrativa antiimperialista de resistencia.
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Fallas Santana, Carmen María. "EL FILIBUSTERISMO EN LOS MENSAJES AL CONGRESO DE LOS PRESIDENTES DE LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS Y LA LEY DE NEUTRALIDAD 1848-1860." Diálogos Revista Electrónica 12, no. 2 (2011): 70. http://dx.doi.org/10.15517/dre.v12i2.6357.

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En este artículo se analiza el abordaje del filibusterismo en los mensajes al Congreso de los presidentes de Estados Unidos en el periodo comprendido entre el fin de la guerra con México y el inicio de la Guerra Civil. Argumenta que todas las administraciones declararon su compromiso de suprimir el filibusterismo porque era perjudicial para los intereses comerciales, políticos y económicos, la seguridad nacional y las relaciones exteriores. Señala que el rechazo de las peticiones de los gobiernos de Nicaragua y Costa Rica para que se impidiera la organización y salida de las expediciones filibusteras de William Walker sembró dudas sobre el compromiso del gobierno de Estados Unidos de aplicar la Ley de Neutralidad de 1818 que las prohibía.
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García, Pantaleón. "EL INCIDENTE DE LA TAJADA DE SANDÍA: SUS CAUSAS Y SUS REPERCUSIONES EN PANAMÁ, 1856." Diálogos Revista Electrónica 9 (January 20, 2008): 1963. http://dx.doi.org/10.15517/dre.v9i0.31324.

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Este artículo tiene cinco objetivos: En primer lugar, vamos a destacar la presencia de WilliamWalker en Nicaragua y sus consecuencias para la patria de Rubén Darío. En segundo lugar,explicaremos como fue llegando el capital norteamericano a tierras panameñas, mediante laconstrucción del Ferrocarril Transístmico y sus repercusiones dentro de la sociedad panameña.En tercer lugar, vamos a demostrar que los sucesos del 15 de abril de 1856 se dieron por laarrogancia de algunos norteamericanos en tránsito por el Istmo que colmó la paciencia de lospanameños y extranjeros radicados en esta región. En cuarto lugar, destacaremos que el temor delos nacionales de ser invadidos por los filibusteros de William Walker, fue otro de los elementosdetonantes de esa lamentable situación y por último, veremos las repercusiones que tuvo para elIstmo de Panamá ese llamado “Incidente de la Tajada de Sandía.”
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Walker, William, Dependency. Nicaragua"

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Sweeney, Patrick N. "William Walker in Nicaragua : a critical review in light of dependency literature : a Master of Arts thesis /." Digital Commons @ Butler University, 1986. http://digitalcommons.butler.edu/grtheses/41.

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William Walker's expedition should be a fertile source of examples of such incipient dependency. This is because that expedition was grounded in the political desires of Manifest Destiny and the pragmatic economics of a cross-isthmus connection between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans during the crucial years just before the U.S. Civil war. Walker's actions caused a war in Central America, brought the United States and England to the brink of war, effected a significant economic relationship, and influenced diplomatic relations between Nicaragua and the U.S. for years afterward. Because of these various actions and reactions, this episode in inter-American relations provides instances of many of the basic elements of the putative dependency relationships alluded to above. There were governments seeking economic advantage, businessmen seeking profitable investments, trade treaties negotiated, and military force used. It was a brief and intense period when economic interests were ultimately controlled by policy decisions.
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2

Halvorson, Chad Allen. "Padre Agustín Vijil and William Walker: Nicaragua, Filibustering, and the National War." Thesis, North Dakota State University, 2014. https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27536.

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The research involves an examination of the basis the National War in Nicaragua from 1854-1857. The purpose is to show how the social, cultural, and political antecedents led to the National War. This has been done by focusing on William Walker and Padre Agustín Vijil. William Walker was the American filibuster invited to Nicaragua in 1855 by the Liberals to aid them in the year old civil war with the Conservatives. Walker took control of the Nicaraguan government, first through a puppet president. He became president himself in July of 1856. Padre Agustín Vijil encountered Walker in October of 1855 and provided an example of the support given to Walker by Nicaraguans. Though Walker would be forced to leave Nicaragua in 1857, the intersection between these individuals sheds light on actions shaping the National War.
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3

Halvorson, Chad Allen. "Padre Agust?n Vijil and William Walker: Nicaragua, Filibustering, and the National War." Thesis, North Dakota State University, 2014. https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27536.

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Abstract:
The research involves an examination of the basis the National War in Nicaragua from 1854-1857. The purpose is to show how the social, cultural, and political antecedents led to the National War. This has been done by focusing on William Walker and Padre Agust?n Vijil. William Walker was the American filibuster invited to Nicaragua in 1855 by the Liberals to aid them in the year old civil war with the Conservatives. Walker took control of the Nicaraguan government, first through a puppet president. He became president himself in July of 1856. Padre Agust?n Vijil encountered Walker in October of 1855 and provided an example of the support given to Walker by Nicaraguans. Though Walker would be forced to leave Nicaragua in 1857, the intersection between these individuals sheds light on actions shaping the National War.
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Books on the topic "Walker, William, Dependency. Nicaragua"

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Geyer, Alejandro Bolaños. William Walker, el predestinado: Biografía. A. Bolaños G., 1992.

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2

William Walker, the gray-eyed man of destiny. A. Bolaños-Geyer, 1988.

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3

Rosengarten, Frederic. William Walker y el ocaso del filibusterismo. Editorial Guaymuras, 1997.

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4

Harrison, Brady. Agent of empire: William Walker and the imperial self in American literature. University of Georgia Press, 2004.

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5

Greene, Laurence. The Filibuster: The Career Of William Walker. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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Empire by Invitation: William Walker and Manifest Destiny in Central America. Harvard University Press, 2018.

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7

Gobat, Michel. Empire by Invitation: William Walker and Manifest Destiny in Central America. Harvard University Press, 2018.

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