Stories about postcolonial bandits in Mexico have circulated since the moment Mexico won its independence. Narratives have appeared or been discussed in a wide variety of forms: novels, memoirs, travel accounts, newspaper articles, the graphic arts, social science literature, movies, ballads, and historical monographs. During the decades between independence and the Mexican Revolution, bandit narratives were integral to the broader national and class struggles between Mexicans and foreigners concerning the definition and creation of the Mexican nation-state. Bandit Nation is the first complete analysis of the cultural impact that banditry had on Mexico from the time of its independence to the Mexican Revolution. Chris Frazer focuses on the nature and role of foreign travel accounts, novels, and popular ballads, known as corridos, to analyze how and why Mexicans and Anglo-Saxon travelers created and used images of banditry to influence state formation, hegemony, and national identity. Narratives about banditry are linked to a social and political debate about "mexican-ness" and the nature of justice. Although considered a relic of the past, the Mexican bandit continues to cast a long shadow over the present, in the form of narco-traffickers, taxicab hijackers, and Zapatista guerrillas. Bandit Nation is an important contribution to the cultural and the general histories of postcolonial Mexico.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-8032-2031-7 (9780803220317)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Chris Frazer is an assistant professor of history at St. Francis Xavier University in Canada.
Introduction: Imagining Bandits in Mexico: Memory, Legend, and History; 1: The Armed Bodies of Men: Banditry and the Mexican State; 2: The Nest and Nursery of Brigands: Travelers and Bandits; 3: Unsolved Mysteries of Civilization: Banditry in the Mexican Novel; 4: With Her Pistols in Her Holster: Bandits and Corridos; 5: The Survival of the Fittest: Modernity and the Mexican Atavist; Conclusion: The Spirit of Popular Banditry