Jay Kinsbruner

Jay Kinsbruner (1939–2007)[1][2] was a professor and professor emeritus of history at Queens College, City University of New York.

Kinsbruner worked initially on early national Chile, but subsequently studied Latin American independence processes with a comparative approach. His books include:

  • Diego Portales: Interpretative Essays on the Man and Times (Martinus Nijhoff, 1967)[3]
  • Bernardo O'Higgins (Twayne Publishers, 1968)[4]
  • The Spanish-American Independence Movement (Dryden Press 1973)[5]
  • Chile: A Historical Interpretation (Harper & Row, 1974)[6]
  • Independence in Spanish America: Civil Wars, Revolutions, and Underdevelopment (University of New Mexico Press, 1994)[7]
  • Petty Capitalism in Spanish America: The Pulperos of Puebla, Mexico City, Caracas, and Buenos Aires (Westview Press, 1987)[8]
  • Not of Pure Blood: The Free People of Color and Racial Prejudice in Nineteenth-Century Puerto Rico (Duke University Press, 1996)[9]
  • The Colonial Spanish-American City: Urban Life in the Age of Atlantic Capitalism (University of Texas Press, 2005)[10]

He also edited the second edition of the Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, with over 3,000 articles.

References

  1. "Jay Kinsbruner College Professor, 68". Sullivan County Democrat. 16 October 2007. Retrieved 7 November 2019.
  2. "Obituary of Jay Kinsbruner". Joseph N. Garlick Funeral Home. Retrieved 7 November 2019.
  3. Reviews of Diego Portales: Thomas O. Flickema, The Hispanic American Historical Review, doi:10.2307/2511838, JSTOR 2511838; Carl Solberg, The American Historical Review, doi:10.2307/1841493, JSTOR 1841493; Terence S. Tarr, The Americas, doi:10.2307/980291, JSTOR 980291
  4. Reviews of Bernardo O'Higgins: Richard K. Murdoch, The Americas, doi:10.2307/980699; JSTOR 980699; Carl E. Solberg, The American Historical Review, doi:10.2307/1873312, JSTOR 1873312; Terence S. Tarr, The Hispanic American Historical Review, doi:10.2307/2510859, JSTOR 2510859
  5. Review of The Spanish-American Independence Movement: Leon G. Campbell, The Hispanic American Historical Review, doi:10.2307/2512750, JSTOR 2512750
  6. Reviews of Chile: Jacques A. Barbier, The History Teacher, doi:10.2307/491767, JSTOR 491767; Arnold J. Bauer, The Hispanic American Historical Review, doi:10.2307/2512383, JSTOR 2512383; Gertrude Matyoka, The Americas, doi:10.2307/980171, JSTOR 980171
  7. Reviews of Independence in Spanish America: Timothy E. Anna, The Historian, JSTOR 24449638; John Lynch, Journal of Latin American Studies, JSTOR 158493
  8. Reviews of Petty Capitalism in Spanish America: Kevin Gosner, The Americas, doi:10.2307/1006921, JSTOR 1006921; Elizabeth Kuznesof, The American Historical Review, doi:10.2307/1868295, JSTOR 1868295; Manuel Miño Grijalva, Historia Mexicana, JSTOR 25138195; Barbara A. Tenenbaum, The Hispanic American Historical Review, doi:10.2307/2515527, JSTOR 2515527
  9. Reviews of Not of Pure Blood: Franklin W. Knight, The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, JSTOR 207076; José M. García Leduc, The Americas, doi:10.2307/1008308, JSTOR 1008308; Aline Helg, The American Historical Review, doi:10.2307/2649944, JSTOR 2649944; Felix V. Matos Rodriguez, The Historian, JSTOR 24449911; Winthrop R. Wright, NWIG, JSTOR 41849946
  10. Reviews of The Colonial Spanish-American City: Irene Chico-Wyatt, The Sixteenth Century Journal, doi:10.2307/20478096, JSTOR 20478096; Gilbert R. Cruz, The Journal of Arizona History, JSTOR 41696971; John E. Kicza, Journal of Latin American Studies, JSTOR 4491760; Kris Lane, Urban History, JSTOR 44613659; Mariselle Meléndez, Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies, JSTOR 20641819; David J. Robinson, Geographical Review, JSTOR 30034202; Charles F. Walker, The American Historical Review, doi:10.1086/ahr.111.2.534, JSTOR 10.1086/ahr.111.2.534
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