El - Descubrimiento De Amг©rica
: Popularized during the 1992 quincentennial, this perspective attempts to balance the narrative by acknowledging the indigenous experience and the mutual (though unequal) exchange of plants, animals, and ideas.
: For a review of the event from the perspective of those on the receiving end, Miguel León-Portilla's " The Broken Spears " provides indigenous accounts of the arrival and conquest, offering a stark contrast to European journals. El Descubrimiento de AmГ©rica
: This review treats the discovery as a problem of alterity (the perception of the "other"). Todorov examines how the inability of the Spanish to truly understand indigenous communication led to the collapse of their civilizations. Todorov examines how the inability of the Spanish
: O'Gorman argues that America was not "discovered" in 1492 because a discovery implies finding something that the seeker already knows exists or is looking for. Columbus was looking for Asia; therefore, he could not "discover" a continent he didn't know was there. Instead, the concept of "America" was invented over time as Europeans gradually interpreted the land as a new, distinct fourth part of the world. Instead, the concept of "America" was invented over
: He views the event as the moment European thought had to break away from its rigid medieval worldview (which only accounted for three continents) to accommodate this new reality, effectively birthing the "Modern Age."