Description

Book Synopsis
Examines the role of the vernacular arts in Mexicos transformation from a regionally and culturally fragmented country into a modern nation-state with an inclusive and compelling national identity.

Trade Review
Crafting Mexico is an important and original contribution to the literature on
visual arts in national ideologies. The detailed history, sophisticated analyses, intriguing case studies, and wonderful black and white and color photographs make this book essential to the library of anyone interested in Mexican popular art. “ - Michael Chibnik, Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology
Crafting México is a major contribution to the growing literature on nation, revolution, and indigenismo in postrevolutionary Mexico. . . . This fascinating and richly illustrated book is a fitting testimony to over a decade of exhaustive research and careful writing. It will surely serve as a model for future work.” - Stephen E. Lewis, The Americas
Crafting Mexico is an impressive work of cultural and intellectual history
that is unique in analyzing the intersection of grassroots practices with
intellectual currents. It should gain an audience among scholars of state
formation beyond Mexico or Latin America.” - Robert F. Alegre, History: Reviews of New Books
“Rick A. López tells the fascinating story of how folk art produced by anonymous potters, weavers, and wood carvers became a ‘proud symbol of Mexico’s authentic national identity’ (p. 2). His excellent monograph advances our understanding of Mexico’s cultural revolution—the state policies, artistic movements, and commercial developments that transformed a regionally fragmented postwar society into a unified nationstate with an ethnically inclusive national identity.” - Michael Snodgrass, American Historical Review
Crafting Mexico reminds us that quality scholarship does not resort to sweeping generalizations but rather assesses what is often a complex situation case by case. It is an impressive interdisciplinary study that adds much to our appreciation of modern Mexican culture and society.” - Andrew Grant Wood, Hispanic American Historical Review
Crafting Mexico covers much new territory. Its linkage of local, national, and transnational history is exemplary.”—Mary Kay Vaughan, co-editor of The Eagle and the Virgin: Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–1940
“In recent decades, historians of twentieth-century Mexico have reshaped the way we understand state and nation formation—particularly popular constructions of the national—and the role that foreign actors have played in brokering Mexico’s distinctive, transnational process of becoming modern. Crafting Mexico represents a culminating moment in these inquiries. Better than any study I know, it wrestles with the complex process whereby Mexico transformed itself from a fragmented society, driven by regional loyalties, linguistic and cultural particularism, and caudillo politics, into one of the hemisphere’s most unified nations. Part of the answer, Rick A. López argues masterfully, lies in a surprisingly contingent aesthetic and political process that embraced foreign and local actors, cosmopolitan intellectuals and indigenous crafts producers, and a panoply of state and private initiatives. Deftly integrating analytical and spatial dimensions, and bridging temporal boundaries, Crafting Mexico is a substantial achievement.”—Gilbert M. Joseph, co-editor of Fragments of a Golden Age: The Politics of Culture in Mexico since 1940
Crafting México is a major contribution to the growing literature on nation, revolution, and indigenismo in postrevolutionary Mexico. . . . This fascinating and richly illustrated book is a fitting testimony to over a decade of exhaustive research and careful writing. It will surely serve as a model for future work.” -- Stephen E. Lewis * The Americas *
Crafting Mexico is an important and original contribution to the literature on
visual arts in national ideologies. The detailed history, sophisticated analyses, intriguing case studies, and wonderful black and white and color photographs make this book essential to the library of anyone interested in Mexican popular art. “ -- Michael Chibnik * Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology *
Crafting Mexico is an impressive work of cultural and intellectual history
that is unique in analyzing the intersection of grassroots practices with
intellectual currents. It should gain an audience among scholars of state
formation beyond Mexico or Latin America.” -- Robert F. Alegre * History: Reviews of New Books *
Crafting Mexico reminds us that quality scholarship does not resort to sweeping generalizations but rather assesses what is often a complex situation case by case. It is an impressive interdisciplinary study that adds much to our appreciation of modern Mexican culture and society.” -- Andrew Grant Wood Hispanic * American Historical Review *
“Rick A. López tells the fascinating story of how folk art produced by anonymous potters, weavers, and wood carvers became a ‘proud symbol of Mexico’s authentic national identity’ (p. 2). His excellent monograph advances our understanding of Mexico’s cultural revolution—the state policies, artistic movements, and commercial developments that transformed a regionally fragmented postwar society into a unified nationstate with an ethnically inclusive national identity.” -- Michael Snodgrass * American Historical Review *

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations vii
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: Nation Formation, Popular Art, and the Search for a Mexican Aesthetic 1
Part I. Indianness and the Postrevolutionary Mexican Nation 27
1. Ethnicizing the Nation: The India Bonita Contest of 1921 29
2. Popular Art and the Staging of Indianness 65
3. Foreign-Mexican Collaboration, 1920–1940 95
4. The Postrevolutionary Cultural Project, 1916–1938 127
5. The Museum and the Market, 1929–1948 151
6. Formulating a State Policy toward Popular Art, 1937–1974 175
Part II. Alternative Narratives of Metropolitan Intervention: The Artisans of Olinalá, Guerrero 195
7. The "Unbroken Tradition" of Olinalá from the Aztecs through the Revolution 201
8. Transnational Renaissance and Local Power Struggles, 1920s to 1950s 229
9. The Road to Olinalá, 1935–1972 263
Conclusions 289
Notes 299
Bibliography 349
Index 381

Crafting Mexico

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    A Hardback by Rick A. Lopez

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      View other formats and editions of Crafting Mexico by Rick A. Lopez

      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 9/9/2010 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780822346944, 978-0822346944
      ISBN10: 082234694X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Examines the role of the vernacular arts in Mexicos transformation from a regionally and culturally fragmented country into a modern nation-state with an inclusive and compelling national identity.

      Trade Review
      Crafting Mexico is an important and original contribution to the literature on
      visual arts in national ideologies. The detailed history, sophisticated analyses, intriguing case studies, and wonderful black and white and color photographs make this book essential to the library of anyone interested in Mexican popular art. “ - Michael Chibnik, Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology
      Crafting México is a major contribution to the growing literature on nation, revolution, and indigenismo in postrevolutionary Mexico. . . . This fascinating and richly illustrated book is a fitting testimony to over a decade of exhaustive research and careful writing. It will surely serve as a model for future work.” - Stephen E. Lewis, The Americas
      Crafting Mexico is an impressive work of cultural and intellectual history
      that is unique in analyzing the intersection of grassroots practices with
      intellectual currents. It should gain an audience among scholars of state
      formation beyond Mexico or Latin America.” - Robert F. Alegre, History: Reviews of New Books
      “Rick A. López tells the fascinating story of how folk art produced by anonymous potters, weavers, and wood carvers became a ‘proud symbol of Mexico’s authentic national identity’ (p. 2). His excellent monograph advances our understanding of Mexico’s cultural revolution—the state policies, artistic movements, and commercial developments that transformed a regionally fragmented postwar society into a unified nationstate with an ethnically inclusive national identity.” - Michael Snodgrass, American Historical Review
      Crafting Mexico reminds us that quality scholarship does not resort to sweeping generalizations but rather assesses what is often a complex situation case by case. It is an impressive interdisciplinary study that adds much to our appreciation of modern Mexican culture and society.” - Andrew Grant Wood, Hispanic American Historical Review
      Crafting Mexico covers much new territory. Its linkage of local, national, and transnational history is exemplary.”—Mary Kay Vaughan, co-editor of The Eagle and the Virgin: Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–1940
      “In recent decades, historians of twentieth-century Mexico have reshaped the way we understand state and nation formation—particularly popular constructions of the national—and the role that foreign actors have played in brokering Mexico’s distinctive, transnational process of becoming modern. Crafting Mexico represents a culminating moment in these inquiries. Better than any study I know, it wrestles with the complex process whereby Mexico transformed itself from a fragmented society, driven by regional loyalties, linguistic and cultural particularism, and caudillo politics, into one of the hemisphere’s most unified nations. Part of the answer, Rick A. López argues masterfully, lies in a surprisingly contingent aesthetic and political process that embraced foreign and local actors, cosmopolitan intellectuals and indigenous crafts producers, and a panoply of state and private initiatives. Deftly integrating analytical and spatial dimensions, and bridging temporal boundaries, Crafting Mexico is a substantial achievement.”—Gilbert M. Joseph, co-editor of Fragments of a Golden Age: The Politics of Culture in Mexico since 1940
      Crafting México is a major contribution to the growing literature on nation, revolution, and indigenismo in postrevolutionary Mexico. . . . This fascinating and richly illustrated book is a fitting testimony to over a decade of exhaustive research and careful writing. It will surely serve as a model for future work.” -- Stephen E. Lewis * The Americas *
      Crafting Mexico is an important and original contribution to the literature on
      visual arts in national ideologies. The detailed history, sophisticated analyses, intriguing case studies, and wonderful black and white and color photographs make this book essential to the library of anyone interested in Mexican popular art. “ -- Michael Chibnik * Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology *
      Crafting Mexico is an impressive work of cultural and intellectual history
      that is unique in analyzing the intersection of grassroots practices with
      intellectual currents. It should gain an audience among scholars of state
      formation beyond Mexico or Latin America.” -- Robert F. Alegre * History: Reviews of New Books *
      Crafting Mexico reminds us that quality scholarship does not resort to sweeping generalizations but rather assesses what is often a complex situation case by case. It is an impressive interdisciplinary study that adds much to our appreciation of modern Mexican culture and society.” -- Andrew Grant Wood Hispanic * American Historical Review *
      “Rick A. López tells the fascinating story of how folk art produced by anonymous potters, weavers, and wood carvers became a ‘proud symbol of Mexico’s authentic national identity’ (p. 2). His excellent monograph advances our understanding of Mexico’s cultural revolution—the state policies, artistic movements, and commercial developments that transformed a regionally fragmented postwar society into a unified nationstate with an ethnically inclusive national identity.” -- Michael Snodgrass * American Historical Review *

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations vii
      Acknowledgments ix
      Introduction: Nation Formation, Popular Art, and the Search for a Mexican Aesthetic 1
      Part I. Indianness and the Postrevolutionary Mexican Nation 27
      1. Ethnicizing the Nation: The India Bonita Contest of 1921 29
      2. Popular Art and the Staging of Indianness 65
      3. Foreign-Mexican Collaboration, 1920–1940 95
      4. The Postrevolutionary Cultural Project, 1916–1938 127
      5. The Museum and the Market, 1929–1948 151
      6. Formulating a State Policy toward Popular Art, 1937–1974 175
      Part II. Alternative Narratives of Metropolitan Intervention: The Artisans of Olinalá, Guerrero 195
      7. The "Unbroken Tradition" of Olinalá from the Aztecs through the Revolution 201
      8. Transnational Renaissance and Local Power Struggles, 1920s to 1950s 229
      9. The Road to Olinalá, 1935–1972 263
      Conclusions 289
      Notes 299
      Bibliography 349
      Index 381

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