179
Latin America in the
Nineteenth Century
Coff ee Plantation, 1935, by Candido Portinari/Museo Nacional Bellas Artes, Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil/Index/Bridgeman Art Library, London/New York
NDEPENDENCE LEFT MUCH of the colonial social structure intact. This
fact was very apparent to liberal leaders of the postindependence
era. “The war against Spain,” declared the Colombian liberal
Ramón Mercado in 1853, “was not a revolution.... Independence only scratched
the surface of the social problem, without changing its essential nature.” After
winning their independence, the new Latin American states began a long, uphill