Caribbean & Latin America
From Involution to Revolution in Mexico: Liberal Development, Patriarchy, and Social Violence in the Central Highlands, 1870–1915
By , Georgetown University (April 2008)
Sections: Caribbean & Latin America
Subjects: Nations and Peoples, History, Economic History, Political History.
Places: Americas, Central America.
Periods: 1000 - 1999, 1800-1899, 1900-1999.
Key Topics: social issues, authority, revolution, public order.
Abstract
Forces loyal to Emiliano Zapata rose to demand land and community autonomy in the revolution that brought destruction and transformation to Mexico after 1910. Men fought to right historic wrongs, land losses that began in the colonial era and political exclusions that mounted during the nineteenth century. Yet those historic grievances were already deeply felt and clearly expressed during the political and social conflicts of the 1860s and 1870s. Revolutionary mobilization did not surge until 1911, after three decades of political stability and commercial development under the authoritarian liberal regime of Porfirio Díaz. This article examines the social consequences of that dynamic liberal development in the highland basins south of Mexico City, the Zapatista heartland after 1910. It argues that population growth, land concentration, and mechanization fueled a commercial expansion that led to proliferating insecurities among the rural majority, insecurities lived by young men as threats to the patriarchal roles they presumed their birthright – their one advantage in communities defined by dependence and hard labor. The first result was a rising tide of violent crime within families and communities during decades of political stability. Then, after the political break of 1910, villagers refocused their rage outward in revolutionary assaults on those who presumed to rule and profit. Young men from communities south of Mexico City turned to revolution only after successful liberal development undermined their chances to live as patriarchs, even as dependent laboring patriarchs. They fought for land, community – and patriarchy.
DOI: 10.1111/j.1478-0542.2008.00527.x
This article abstract has been viewed 5450 times.
Top 5 related articles
-
The Revolution, the State, and Economic Development in Mexico
By , University of California Irvine
(Vol. 3, August 2005)
History Compass -
Imagining the State and Building the Nation: The Case of Nineteenth-Century Argentina
By , Florida International University
(Vol. 4, January 2006)
History Compass -
Making the Americas: U.S. Business People and Latin Americans from the Age of Revolutions to the Era of Globalization
By , University of Houston
(Vol. 2, March 2004)
History Compass -
Liberalism and Its Discontents: Lessons From the Brazilian Past
By , University of Texas at Austin (Emeritus)
(Vol. 2, July 2004)
History Compass -
The Politics of Economic Nationalism in Postrevolutionary Mexico
By , University at Albany, SUNY
(Vol. 4, April 2006)
History Compass
Top 5 Related Blackwell Reference Chapters
European Integration: From the Common Market to the Single Market
Western European countries launched a process of highly institutionalized economic integration in the ...
By Desmond Dinan
Economic Developments in Western and Eastern Europe since 1945
While western and eastern Europe pursued profoundly different approaches to organizing their economies ...
By Ian Jackson
Europe and Economic Globalization since 1945
During the long Cold War demonstrators frequently took to the streets to protest atomic weapons and the ...
By Alfred E. Eckes Jr.
Economic Integration since Maastricht
The Maastricht Treaty was adopted in December 1991 by EC heads of state and government and subsequently ...
By Christopher Flockton
Populism and Developmentalism
The Great Depression brought lasting change to Latin America by bringing to an end the long nineteenth ...
By Joel Wolfe