Uruguay's origin is richly detailed, from its precolonial roots to European colonization of the Banda Oriental and the Spanish settlement of Montevideo, to the legendary caudillos José Artigas and Fructuoso Rivera and the creation of the independent state of Uruguay in 1828. Like other Latin American countries, it struggled with state formation. Then a major change occurred at the end of the nineteenth century: policies following trends of modernization drastically overhauled the nation's economic and social infrastructure and a national identity emerged in poetry and arts.
This book dives into the presidency of José Batlle y Ordóñez, the country's involvement in World War II, its economic and political collapse, and its eventual military seizure of the government in 1973. In 1985, the dictatorship reluctantly left power, and the country transitioned to its original democratic values. Social welfare projects, green energy programs unheard of in South America, and progressive policies flourish into the twenty-first century.