Abstract

La Florida: Five Hundred Years of Hispanic Presence. Edited by Viviana Diaz Balsera and Rachel A. May. (Gainesville and other cities: University Press of Florida, 2014. Pp. [xvi], 312. $79.95, ISBN 978-0-8130-6011-8.) Viviana Diaz Balsera and Rachel A. May's book is a timely and valuable addition to the historical and cultural literature of Hispanic influence in Florida. Twelve brief, interdisciplinary chapters organized into two chronological parts--La Florida: First and Second Spanish Periods and Postcolonial and Contemporary Florida--address five hundred years of Florida's Hispanic past from Juan Ponce de Leon's contact with Calusa Indians to Cuban influence in recent presidential elections. Balsera and May provide a comprehensive, chronological study of Florida's Hispanic past but rather a meticulously researched, highly readable collection of essays. Authors include leading scholars of Florida history and culture who participated in conferences sponsored by the Florida Humanities Council to commemorate Florida's quincentennial. Setting the tone for the quality and breadth of the book is Ghosts: Spain and Florida, 1513-2013, Gary R. Mormino's well-written and entertaining overview of five hundred years of Florida history. Jerald T. Milanich's contribution, Charting Juan Ponce de Leon's 1513 Voyage to Florida: The Calusa Indians amid Latitudes of Controversy, demonstrates how certain primary sources (Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas's Historia general de los hechos de los Castillanos en las islas i tierrafirme del Mar Oceano and a map by Count Otomanno Freducci) have fed the controversy surrounding Ponce's landing site. Milanich suggests that Ponce's 1513 voyage and his skirmishes with the Calusas had little or no lasting effect on native culture (p. 52). Paul E. Hoffman's 'Until the Land was Understood': Spaniards Confront La Florida, 1500-1600 is an overview of the Spanish discovery of the physical and human resources of La Florida. Hoffman shows how 'the secrets of the land,' once revealed, restrained Spanish settlement on the peninsula and limited Spanish recognition in the Anglo version of American history that emerged in the nineteenth century (p. 69). Raquel Chang-Rodriguez's critical analysis of Garcilaso de la Vega's La Florida del Inca (1605) and Luis Jeronimo de Ore's Relacion de los ma'rtires de la Florida (circa 1619) highlights the agency afforded Native Americans in Vega's work and the nuanced view of life painted by the Relacion (p. 99). Amy Turner Bushnell's contribution, A Land Renowned for War: Florida as a Maritime Marchland, explains why soldiers and the situado were the determining factors of early Spanish settlements rather than settlers and exports. As Bushnell explains, the early presidio was designed not to support itself and grow into a colony of settlement, but to monitor a strategic seaway (p. 104). Jane Landers's 'Giving Liberty to AH': Spanish Florida as a Black Sanctuary, 1673-1790 paints Spanish Florida as a land of contact-era miscegenation that evolved into a haven for runaways from Anglo-American colonies to the north. Landers quotes Ira Berlin to explain the uniqueness of Florida as a 'society with slaves' where black militias were commonplace and slave manumission was possible (p. …

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