Fernando PErez Montesinos is an associate professor at UCLA. A historian of nineteenth-century Mexico and the Mexican Revolution, his work includes the edited volume El ascenso maderista y el fin del rEgimen porfiriano. He is a senior editor of the Hispanic American Historical Review.
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List of Illustrations Introduction. Landscaping Indigenous MichoacAn: Ecology and Community, Liberalism and Capitalism in an Indigenous World, 1820-1920 Chapter 1. Making and Remaking the Indigenous Highlands, circa 7000 BC-AD 1820 Chapter 2. A Reliable and Resilient Landscape, 1800-1890 Chapter 3. The Tumultuous Origins of the Reparto Era, 1821-1867 Chapter 4. Contesting the Liberal Landscape, 1867-1875 Chapter 5. Land Concentrations and State Interventions, 1875-1890 Chapter 6. Capitalism Comes to the Uplands: Railroads Invade the Forests, 1890-1900 Chapter 7. Assaulting the Landscape: Timber Capitalism, 1900-1910 Epilogue. The Landscape Survives: Revolution Breaks Timber Capitalism, 1910-1920 Acknowledgments. My Village Notes Bibliography Index

