I made this new map diving Latin America into various "cultural spheres" after hearing suggestions from anons. How accurate do you think this map is, Latinos of Jow Forums?
I made this new map diving Latin America into various "cultural spheres" after hearing suggestions from anons...
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Obsessed (but sort of accurate actually)
Nice.
change the us part from norteño to mexican, except in texas
>I made this new map diving Latin America into various "cultural spheres" after hearing suggestions from anons. How accurate do you think this map is, Latinos of Jow Forums?
>Latinos
2/10
The mexican ibfluence over the US is much greater user, it should extend to at least half of the bordering states.
The goiano one is pretty fucking wrong. And why did you choose that name to represent the biggest portion of the country? Goiás is a literally who state where nothing ever happens, that's the same thing as saying that Montana represents 70% of the US.
French Guiana should be influenced by both France and the surrounding cultures
I just used "goiano" since I didn't really know what else to call "rural Brazil".
To be fair 'Iowa' actually serves as a metonym for rural fly-over American.
Actually pretty accurate for Argentina... I would add 'guaranies' from Paraguay, some argentine border provinces share their culture, accent and ethnicity.
these are the cultural spheres of Colombia. yellow is Caribbean sphere, dark pink is Pacific (Black people mostly), light pink is Eastern plains (Colombian "cowboy" culture), green is Amazonian. The others are Andean (most of the population is Andean).
The pacific culture is very different from the caribbean one. should be of another color
Colombian and Venezuelan Amazonas should be of the same color as Brazilian Amazonas. The culture of those areas is very different compared to that of the rest of Venezuela and Colombia
I think Paraguay and eastern Bolivian should become their own "Guarani" sphere.
>culture
Not really, we just happen to speak guaraní. We don't have native surnames, native celebrations nor native customs like bolivia/perú. But you're still somewhat right. Corrientes and Posadas feel like carbon copies of Asunción.
pretty good
Not language and very few pure guarani heritage, that's true.
But other traditions like chipas, terere, sopa correntina (variation of your dish) etc, etc... Are very popular.
you're wrong
Bolivia has little guarani culture compared to the brazilian state Mato Grosso Do Sul
why would you call the mexican region mesoamericano
cringe
what's wrong with it you retard
mesoamerica is a pre-columbian distinction. stop we wuzzing, you cringy fuck.
Will Gran Colombia ever come back?
a good part of the inhabitants of the Colombian Amazon are "colonos" from other parts of the country.
Why do you care?
Why do americans have such passion for ephemeral meme countries they barely know anything about?
then how would you call it
that's the only name we have for this region you idiot, it's not about wewuzing
The four homies meet at Grove Street.
RYDER
I got with them mother-fuckers
though - showed them niggaz who's
gangsta. Ryder, nigga!
>start race-mixing!
>amazonense "culture"
They are just recent settlers from the southeast and the northeast.
Northern Mexico formed part of Aridoamerica.
Also, I would change the "Maya" to "Yucatec". Is not like those guys keep building pyramids. And Chiapas and Central America should be included in the Maya region if that was the case.
>that's the only name we have for this region you idiot,
sweetie, nobody even uses mesoamerica in a current context.
i would just call it north america or central america.
bump
east Peru has Amazonian culture
some Amazonian cultures in Peru, the bigger ones, have been influenced with Andean culture since Inca times or maybe before them, because of that they use some Quechua loanwords, play pan flutes and wear robes, but even then there's many many other cultures, albeit smaller that haven't been influenced at all, some classified as uncontested are untouched even by modern Peruvians
the Peruvian jungle is also full of modern colonizers from the highlands and the coast of Peru