Making an Urban Public: Popular Claims to the City in Mexico, 1879-1932

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Product Details
Price
$63.25
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
416
Dimensions
6.4 X 9.1 X 1.5 inches | 1.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780822945505

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About the Author
Christina M. Jiménez is a professor of history and department chair at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs. Her research and teaching interests include Mexican history, Latin American history, comparative urban history, citizenship studies, politics of public spaces and pedagogy of inclusiveness. She is also co-editor of the Matrix Reader: Examining the Dynamics of Oppression and Privilege (Mc-Graw Hill, 2008).
Reviews
Masterful appropriately describes Christina Jiménez's historical analysis of Morelia from 1879 to 1932. Without resort to methodological jargon or theoretical claims, the author writes judicially about the creation of a liberal moral economy that included the right to petition and receive an answer and investigates the meaning (in different words) of the urban patria chica with its own imagined community.--William H. Beezley, University of Arizona
Making an Urban Public presents a striking and original interpretation of Mexican urban history. Christina Jiménez challenges traditional narratives that foreground resistance and disempowerment. She provides a sweeping new vision of a contentious political sphere in which city dwellers' increasingly pointed demands for urban services helped them to find a political voice in turn-of-the century Mexico.--Chris Boyer, University of Illinois at Chicago
Jiménez's insightful approach is enhanced by her superb writing style.--John Mason Hart, The University of Houston
Making an Urban Public brings attention to the ways that ordinary people experienced modernization and attempted to shape the organization of urban space. . . . She shows that nonelite citizens of Morelia, despite attempts from above to exclude them, enthusiastically participated in urban political culture and creatively deployed various rhetorical strategies to pursue their right to the city.-- "New Books in Latin American Studies"