When World's Collide Analysis

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When World’s Collide Reflection Paper To begin, before viewing this film and taking this course, I possessed a very broad sense of the tragedy of the conquered indigenous natives in both the Latin America’s and the USA. I have always despised the ethnocentric depictions of history throughout movies, images, textbooks, as well as other media and musical influences. This film truly helped expand my knowledge and put what we have read so far into perspective. Before this film, one concept that was unknown to me was the fact that corn, or Teocicle, was an import and not native to either Europe or Spain. Furthermore, while I did know of Isabella’s commitment to Catholicism, I did not know of her contradictions between religion and monetary concerns, i.e. gold. …show more content…

Another phenomenon plagued the times: the absence of women. Sexual violence of indigenous women by Spanish nobility as a result of lack of women. The daughters who resulted from these unions were often abandoned at local Convents as orphans. . Then the term Mestizas became used. Once these women reached adulthood, some became nuns, however the remaining balance left and began having children of their own. However, this threatened to destroy Spanish domination. The orphans were not the only examples of interbreeding’s. Desperate to keep Spanish domination in effect and preserve their way of life, they created the Caste system. Pure blooded Spanish= top. Castista= 3 quarters Spanish. Mestizas 50% Spanish. And Africans on bottom as a result of slavery, despite freed Africans consisting of conquistadors themselves but it didn’t hold for long. Since Africans began to spread themselves among existing cultural groups. This mixing made the Caste system collapse. New World gold and financial success had much clearer results than Christian domination and a new identical Spanish

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