Cover image for Writing Mexican History.
Writing Mexican History.
Title:
Writing Mexican History.
Author:
Van Young, Eric.
ISBN:
9780804780551
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (253 pages)
Contents:
Copyright -- Title Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- PART I : THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF RURAL MEXICO AND LATIN AMERICA -- 1. Waves and Ripples: Studies of the Mexican Hacienda since 1980 -- 2. Rural Latin America: The Colonial Period and Nineteenth Century -- PART II : THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF COLONIAL MEXICO AND THE ERA OF INDEPENDENCE -- 3. Two Decades of Anglophone Writing on Colonial Mexico: Continuity and Change since 1980 -- 4. No Human Power to Impede the Impenetrable Order of Providence: The Historiography of Mexican Independence -- PART III: THEORY AND METHODOLOGY -- 5. Doing Regional History: A Theoretical Discussion and Some Mexican Cases -- 6. The Cuautla Lazarus: Reading Texts on Popular Collective Action -- PART IV: ECONOMIC HISTORY AND CULTURAL HISTORY -- 7. The New Cultural History Comes to Old Mexico -- Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
This collection brings together a group of important and influential essays on Mexican history and historiography by Eric Van Young, a leading scholar in the field. The essays, several of which appear here in English for the first time, are primarily historiographical; that is, they address the ways in which separate historical literatures have developed over time. They cover a wide range of topics: the historiography of the colonial and nineteenth-century Mexican and Latin American countryside; historical writing in English on the history of colonial Mexico; British, American, and Mexican historical writing on the Mexican Independence movement; the methodology of regional and cultural history; and the relationship of cultural to economic history. Some of the essays have been and will continue to be controversial, while others-for example, those on studies of the Mexican hacienda since 1980, on the theory and method of regional history, and on the "new cultural history" of Mexico-are widely considered classics of the genre.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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