Description

Book Synopsis
"From Liberal to Revolutionary Oaxaca" aims at finally setting Mexican history free of stereotypes about the southern state of Oaxaca, long portrayed as a traditional and backward society resistant to the forces of modernization and marginal to the Revolution.

Trade Review

“This is a critical, seminal work on Mexican history. . . . One of the greatest strengths of the book is its debunking of myths and poorly documented claims that permeate writing about Oaxaca.”

—Howard Campbell,University of Texas at El Paso


“The book represents many years of remarkable excavations in local, state, and national archives. No other regional history of any other Mexican state exhibits this thorough a survey of sources. The book is encyclopedic in its coverage.”

—Mark Wasserman,Rutgers University


“This is a critical, seminal work on Mexican history. The author argues that we need to rethink Mexican history through an analysis of the indigenous South that has previously been portrayed as backward and reactionary. The book is an encyclopedic overview of a key period in Oaxaca history; it is without peer for the 19th century. One of the greatest strengths of the book is its debunking of myths and poorly documented claims that permeate writing about Oaxaca.”

—Howard Campbell,University of Texas at El Paso


“Professor Chassen-López has rewritten the history of Oaxaca, Mexico, from the mid-nineteenth century through the onset of the Mexican Revolution in 1911. She illuminates almost every nook and cranny of this geographically, ethnically, and economically diverse state. The book represents many years of remarkable excavations in local, state, and national archives. No other regional history of any other Mexican state exhibits this thorough a survey of sources. The book is encyclopedic in its coverage. Virtually no aspect of politics and economics during the forty-four years under study goes unexplored. The book is at its best in its depiction of the ‘Worlds of the Indigenous.’ Chassen-Lopez realistically depicts village life. Her analysis of indigenous resistance to the encroachments of centralization and economic and cultural modernization is particularly insightful.”

—Mark Wasserman,Rutgers University


“Twenty years in the making, Chassen-López's new study is certain to claim an important place in the regional literature on modern Mexico. Finally we have a fine-grained social, economic, and political history of Porfirian modernization in Don Porfirio's backyard! This fine volume showcases Chassen-López's mastery of political economy, peasant, and resistance studies and regional historiography and methodology.”

—Gilbert M. Joseph,Yale University


“This magnificently researched work is the most comprehensive, in-depth study to date of a Mexican region in the critically important period of economic growth and nation- and state-building between 1880 and 1910. It elucidates for Mexico’s ‘forgotten south’ the complexity, modernity, and national integration it has long been denied.”

—Mary Kay Vaughan,University of Maryland


“Scholars from the field of Mexican and Latin American studies should not overlook this book.”

—Jorge H. Jimenez History


“This volume makes a major contribution to the analysis of liberalism in Mexico.”

—E.H. Moseley Choice


“The book demonstrates the author’s intellectual formation in material and cultural history, and in subaltern and gender studies, and is fully supported by an impressive range of archival research and a thorough knowledge of secondary sources. When these are combined with an abiding and infectious passion for the subject matter, the result is a powerful and remarkably comprehensive study that will be an essential reference on the subject for many years to come.”

—Paul Garner American Historical Review


“Francie Chassen-López has given us an engrossing and engagingly written book, the result of long, personal experience of Oaxaca and a great deal of meditation on her subject. This combination of firsthand knowledge and historical research is evident throughout the work. . . . The author repeatedly links Oaxaca to other Mexican states by means of apt comparisons and contrasts, and takes the reader through a number of rewarding bibliographical discussions of differing points of view positioned throughout her text.”

—Brain R. Hamnett The Americas


“This stunning regional history, by a scholar who has dedicated more than two decades to the study of Oaxaca, is one of the most thorough and well-documented revisions of centralist historiography.”

—Heather Fowler-Salamini Hispanic American Historical Review



Table of Contents

Contents

List of Tables and Maps

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Part I: Infrastructure and Economics

1. A Thousand Whistles

2. From Time Immemorial to the Porfirian Finca: The Dilemma of Land Tenure

3. The Commercialization of Agriculture

4. The Promoter s Paradise: Mining, Industry, and Commerce

Part II: Society: Class, Ethnicity, and Gender

5. Society: Decent and Otherwise

6. Indigenous Usos y Costumbres and State Formation

7. The Indigenous Peoples of Oaxaca: Negotiating Modernity

Part III: Political Culture and Revolution

8. Liberal Politics: the Dual Legacy

9. Porfirian Politics: A Científico Governor

10. Precursor Politics

11. Revolution in the South

Conclusions

Bibliography

Index

From Liberal to Revolutionary Oaxaca The View

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    £37.00

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    RRP £38.95 – you save £1.95 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Tue 23 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Francie R. Chassen–lópez

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      View other formats and editions of From Liberal to Revolutionary Oaxaca The View by Francie R. Chassen–lópez

      Publisher: Penn State University
      Publication Date: 1/15/2005 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780271025124, 978-0271025124
      ISBN10: 0271025123

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      "From Liberal to Revolutionary Oaxaca" aims at finally setting Mexican history free of stereotypes about the southern state of Oaxaca, long portrayed as a traditional and backward society resistant to the forces of modernization and marginal to the Revolution.

      Trade Review

      “This is a critical, seminal work on Mexican history. . . . One of the greatest strengths of the book is its debunking of myths and poorly documented claims that permeate writing about Oaxaca.”

      —Howard Campbell,University of Texas at El Paso


      “The book represents many years of remarkable excavations in local, state, and national archives. No other regional history of any other Mexican state exhibits this thorough a survey of sources. The book is encyclopedic in its coverage.”

      —Mark Wasserman,Rutgers University


      “This is a critical, seminal work on Mexican history. The author argues that we need to rethink Mexican history through an analysis of the indigenous South that has previously been portrayed as backward and reactionary. The book is an encyclopedic overview of a key period in Oaxaca history; it is without peer for the 19th century. One of the greatest strengths of the book is its debunking of myths and poorly documented claims that permeate writing about Oaxaca.”

      —Howard Campbell,University of Texas at El Paso


      “Professor Chassen-López has rewritten the history of Oaxaca, Mexico, from the mid-nineteenth century through the onset of the Mexican Revolution in 1911. She illuminates almost every nook and cranny of this geographically, ethnically, and economically diverse state. The book represents many years of remarkable excavations in local, state, and national archives. No other regional history of any other Mexican state exhibits this thorough a survey of sources. The book is encyclopedic in its coverage. Virtually no aspect of politics and economics during the forty-four years under study goes unexplored. The book is at its best in its depiction of the ‘Worlds of the Indigenous.’ Chassen-Lopez realistically depicts village life. Her analysis of indigenous resistance to the encroachments of centralization and economic and cultural modernization is particularly insightful.”

      —Mark Wasserman,Rutgers University


      “Twenty years in the making, Chassen-López's new study is certain to claim an important place in the regional literature on modern Mexico. Finally we have a fine-grained social, economic, and political history of Porfirian modernization in Don Porfirio's backyard! This fine volume showcases Chassen-López's mastery of political economy, peasant, and resistance studies and regional historiography and methodology.”

      —Gilbert M. Joseph,Yale University


      “This magnificently researched work is the most comprehensive, in-depth study to date of a Mexican region in the critically important period of economic growth and nation- and state-building between 1880 and 1910. It elucidates for Mexico’s ‘forgotten south’ the complexity, modernity, and national integration it has long been denied.”

      —Mary Kay Vaughan,University of Maryland


      “Scholars from the field of Mexican and Latin American studies should not overlook this book.”

      —Jorge H. Jimenez History


      “This volume makes a major contribution to the analysis of liberalism in Mexico.”

      —E.H. Moseley Choice


      “The book demonstrates the author’s intellectual formation in material and cultural history, and in subaltern and gender studies, and is fully supported by an impressive range of archival research and a thorough knowledge of secondary sources. When these are combined with an abiding and infectious passion for the subject matter, the result is a powerful and remarkably comprehensive study that will be an essential reference on the subject for many years to come.”

      —Paul Garner American Historical Review


      “Francie Chassen-López has given us an engrossing and engagingly written book, the result of long, personal experience of Oaxaca and a great deal of meditation on her subject. This combination of firsthand knowledge and historical research is evident throughout the work. . . . The author repeatedly links Oaxaca to other Mexican states by means of apt comparisons and contrasts, and takes the reader through a number of rewarding bibliographical discussions of differing points of view positioned throughout her text.”

      —Brain R. Hamnett The Americas


      “This stunning regional history, by a scholar who has dedicated more than two decades to the study of Oaxaca, is one of the most thorough and well-documented revisions of centralist historiography.”

      —Heather Fowler-Salamini Hispanic American Historical Review



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      List of Tables and Maps

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction

      Part I: Infrastructure and Economics

      1. A Thousand Whistles

      2. From Time Immemorial to the Porfirian Finca: The Dilemma of Land Tenure

      3. The Commercialization of Agriculture

      4. The Promoter s Paradise: Mining, Industry, and Commerce

      Part II: Society: Class, Ethnicity, and Gender

      5. Society: Decent and Otherwise

      6. Indigenous Usos y Costumbres and State Formation

      7. The Indigenous Peoples of Oaxaca: Negotiating Modernity

      Part III: Political Culture and Revolution

      8. Liberal Politics: the Dual Legacy

      9. Porfirian Politics: A Científico Governor

      10. Precursor Politics

      11. Revolution in the South

      Conclusions

      Bibliography

      Index

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