Deep Mexico, Silent Mexico: An Anthropology of Nationalism

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U of Minnesota Press, 2001 - 354 էջ

In Mexico, as elsewhere, the national space, that network of places where the people interact with state institutions, is constantly changing. How it does so, how it develops, is a historical process-a process that Claudio Lomnitz exposes and investigates in this book, which develops a distinct view of the cultural politics of nation building in Mexico. Lomnitz highlights the varied, evolving, and often conflicting efforts that have been made by Mexicans over the past two centuries to imagine, organize, represent, and know their country, its relations with the wider world, and its internal differences and inequalities. Firmly based on particulars and committed to the specificity of such thinking, this book also has broad implications for how a theoretically informed history can and should be done.

An exploration of Mexican national space by way of an analysis of nationalism, the public sphere, and knowledge production, Deep Mexico, Silent Mexico brings an original perspective to the dynamics of national cultural production on the periphery. Its blending of theoretical innovation, historical inquiry, and critical engagement provides a new model for the writing of history and anthropology in contemporary Mexico and beyond.

Public Worlds Series, volume 9


 

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Acknowledgments
ix
which is that democracy popular sovereignty and a rational governmen
xiv
Making the Nation
xx
Benedict Andersons
xxvi
Communitarian Ideologies and Nationalism
35
Modes of Mexican Citizenship
58
Fissures in Contemporary Mexican Nationalism
110
Contact Zones and
125
Ritual Rumor and Corruption in the Formation
145
Center Periphery and the Connections between
165
Intellectuals
197
Dialectics of
228
Provincial Intellectuals and the Sociology of
263
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