Forging a Mexican People


Collective Subjectivities in Postrevolutionary Print Culture, 1917-1968

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By Pablo Zavala
Imprint:
THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
450 g
Pages:
302

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Description

Pablo Zavala is an assistant professor of Spanish and Latin American Studies and director of the Center for Latin American and Latinx Studies (CLAXS) at Loyola University New Orleans. He was born in Ciudad Juarez and now resides in New Orleans.

"Zavala's Forging a Mexican People opens a window on an aspect of Mexican cultural history that has not yet been thoroughly explained: the long tradition of the graphic press that confronted, evaded, and destabilized the state's attempted capture of popular culture. This fascinating work is an important new chapter in the history of state and pueblo in modern Mexico."-Joshua Lund, author of The Mestizo State: Reading Race in Modern Mexico "Forging a Mexican People is an outstanding analysis of radical printmaking in Mexico in the half century following the Mexican revolution. Zavala demonstrates the key role of revolutionary printmakers in forging a popular discourse of el pueblo and its struggle, even as the Mexican state sought to control and contain popular resistance."-Enrique C. Ochoa, author of Mexico Between Feast and Famine: Food, Corporate Power, and Inequality

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