By the turn of the twentieth century, Argentina had for some time been experiencing the rapid social and economic changes associated with the term ‘modernisation’: urbanisation, growth in communications, frantic construction and incipient industrialisation, all fuelled by massive immigration and the country’s unprecedented economic growth. On the one hand, this was a time of promise, as the modern, urban existence held possibilities of social ascension and freedom from want, as well as opportunities to reinvent
By the turn of the twentieth century, Argentina had for some time been experiencing the rapid social and economic changes associated with the term ‘modernisation’: urbanisation, growth in communications, frantic construction and incipient industrialisation, all fuelled by massive immigration and the country’s unprecedented economic growth. On the one hand, this was a time of promise, as the modern, urban existence held possibilities of social ascension and freedom from want, as well as opportunities to reinvent
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..