What is "Latin America" and what does that term now mean to you?For the reaction paper for this course, I would like for you to reflect on what you have learned in a more comprehensive way. Instead of just listing facts and details, try to explain the current conception you have of this vast region.Here are some questions to reflect on (Please try to incorporate this information as you write this paper):· What is "Latin America" to you?· In what sense is there a place called "Latin America"?· What common features does this region share that allows us to speak of a Latin America (as opposed to a group of nations that are all very different unto themselves)?· In what sense is this term "Latin America" elusive?· Why can it be argued that Latin America is not really a united place? · What are the most important social (languages, religions, cultures, traditions, etc.), economic, and political similarities and differences in the region?· How do the non-European peoples factor into this discussion? (Not just indigenous peoples, but Africans and other groups of immigrants that came later). Do they help define Latin America as a singular region or does their presence serve to disrupt this type of facile classification?· Finally, if you were able to vote on a referendum to unite all of Latin America in a way that resembles the European Union today—with a common currency, freedom to travel, etc.—would you be in favor of that? Explain. [Please read this short explanation of the EU if you are not familiar with it already: to an external site. ]Be sure to incorporate ideas from the Epilogue: Latin America in the 21st Century (the last chapter of the text and our last reading assignment), but do not simply list what the author says. Your argument should be informed by what Eakin has written, but you should use your own words and develop your argument based on your personal way of understanding the situation. In short, I want your take on this and not Eakin's (though there will certainly be many ideas that overlap).