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The Peculiarities of Mexican History: Mexico Compared to Latin America, 1821–1992
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2009
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This is a piece of comparative history, not an exercise in folkloric whimsy. It does not attempt to probe the secrets of lo mexicano, la mexicanidad, or any of the other quasi-metaphysical concepts which litter the field of Mexican cultural history.1 Nor does it pay too much attention to those more positivistic analyses which try to encapsulate Mexican (political) culture in terms of statistical comparisons.2 Rather, it offers some comparative generalisations about Mexican history in the national period, stressing both broad patterns of socio-economic development and specific politico-cultural factors. Thus – for better or worse – its model is Barrington Moore rather than, say, Octavio Paz or Gabriel Almond. It also draws inspiration – and borrows its title – from the work of E. P. Thompson, which in turn has been developed by Eley and Blackbourn in the German context, Corrigan and Sayer in the English.3 Its purpose is to offer some explanations of the distinctiveness (as well as the commonality) of Mexico's history, compared to the history of Latin America, in the national period.4
Let us begin at the end. In the last fifty years, Mexico has experienced relatively rapid economic growth coupled with relative political and social stability.5 The achievements of the ‘stabilised development’ of the 1950s and 1960s are well known: a solid regime, rapid growth rates, low inflation, rising per capita income.6 And, while the 1980s were a decade of relative stagnation, Mexico's relative position within Latin America has not deteriorated.7 Furthermore, the prospects for future development – of a capitalist kind, with all that that entails – look better now than they did in the late 1980s; all the more if the Free Trade Agreement with the U.S.A. is concluded, as now seems probable.
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References
1 See Paz, Octavio, The Labyrinth of Solitude: Life and Thought in Mexico (New York, 1961)Google Scholar and the same author's The Other Mexico: Critique of the Pyramid (New York, 1972)Google Scholar; Ramos, Samuel, Profile of Man and Culture in Mexico (Austin, 1962).Google Scholar That these elusive concepts – delivered, in the case of Octavio Paz, of course, with considerable panache – can ensnare even an acute journalistic mind is shown in Riding, Alan, Distant Neighbors: A Portrait of the Mexicans (New York, 1984), ch. 1.Google Scholar
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4 Of course, all countries are distinct, or peculiar, and it is not difficult to find such claims made for other Latin American countries: for the ‘distinctiveness’ of Chilean history or Guatemala's status as ‘a relatively unusual historical case of conquest and colonialism’: Bergquist, Charles, Labor in Latin America: Comparative Essays on Chile, Argentina, Venezuela and Colombia (Stanford, 1986), p. 20Google Scholar; Smith, Carol A., ‘Introduction: Social Relations in Guatemala over Time and Space’, in Smith, Carol A. (ed.), Guatemalan Indians and the State, 1540 to 1988 (Austin, 1990), p. 2.Google Scholar My point would be that Mexico – or Mexican history – is particularly distinct, peculiarly peculiar. However, in part to offset exaggerated claims of Mexican exceptionality (‘como México no hay dos!’), I will, in passing, note comparisons – as well as contrasts – between Mexico's pattern of development and that of other Latin American countries.
5 ‘Stability’ begs a host of questions. Mexico has been politically stable in the sense of avoiding both frequent ministerial reshuffles (compare the French Fourth Republic) and, more significantly, major regime changes (compare Argentina since the 1940s). By ‘social stability’ I mean not social stasis (Mexican society has changed markedly since 1940) but a (relative) absence of major social conflict – such as affected the country prior to 1940, and most dramatically during 1910–20.
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8 Mexico's place within the bureaucratic-authoritarian spectrum is not clear; at best, it is admitted to the category with major caveats; certainly it is not a paradigmatic case. See O'donnell, Guillermo, ‘Corporatism and the Question of the State’, in Malloy, James M. (ed.), Authoritarianism and Corporatism in Latin America (Pittsburgh, 1977), pp. 53 and 80Google Scholar, and the same author's ‘Introduction to Latin American Cases’, in O'donnell, Guillermo, Schmitter, Philippe C. and Whitehead, Laurence (eds.), Transitions From Authoritarian Rule: Latin America (Baltimore, 1986), pp. 5–6.Google Scholar
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41 Chalco landlords denounced ‘perverse’ peasants who, by virtue of their wayward independence, obstructed hacienda operations: Tutino, , ‘Agrarian Social Change’, pp. 107–108, 114–116Google Scholar; and, for similar complaints from Morelos, see Bazant, Jan, ‘El trabajo y los trabajadores en la Hacienda de Atlacomulco’, in Frost, Elsa Cecilia et al. , (eds.), El Trabajo y los Trabajadores en la Historia de México (México, 1979), pp. 382–384Google Scholar and Pittman, , Hacendados, pp. 60–61.Google Scholar
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43 Powell, T. G., El liberalismoy el campesinado en el centra de México (1850 a 1876) (Mexico, 1974)Google Scholar; Meyer, Jean, ‘La Ley Lerdo y la desamortización de las comunidades en Jalisco’, in Carrasco, Pedro et al. , La sociedad indígena en el centra y occidente de México (Zamora, 1986), pp. 189–212.Google Scholar
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46 On the greater ideological sophistication of later (roughly, post-1860) rebellions, see Reina, , Rebeliones campesinas, pp. 40–41Google Scholar; Katz, Friedrich, ‘Mexico: Restored Republic and Porfiriato, 1967–1910’ in Bethell, Leslie (ed.), The Cambridge History of Latin America (Cambridge, 1986), vol. 5, pp. 12–13Google Scholar; Hart, John M., Las anarquistas mexicanos,1860–1900 (Mexico, 1974), ch. 5.Google Scholar
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49 Katz, , ‘Mexico: Restored Republic and Porfiriato’, pp. 15 and 19–20.Google Scholar
50 Brading, , The First America, p. 664.Google Scholar
51 Katz, Friedrich, Porfirio Díaz frente al descontento popular regional (1891–1893) (México, 1986), pp. 16–18.Google Scholar For a good example of the failure of Porfirian paternalism, see Stevens, Donald Fithian, ‘Agrarian Policy and Instability in Porfirian Mexico’, Americas, 39 (1982), pp. 153–166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
52 Katz, , Porfirio Díaz, p. 21Google Scholar; Guerra, François-Xavier, Le Mexique: De l'Ancien Régime à la Révolution (Paris, 2 vols., 1985), vol. 1, pp. 94–95CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Womack, John Jr., Zapata and the Mexican Revolution (New York, 1968), pp. 12–36.Google Scholar
53 On the shift from ‘traditional’ to ‘order-and-progress’ caudillos and the origins of the Civilista party in Peru, see Gootenburg, Paul, Between Silver and Guano: Commercial Policy and the State in Postindependence Peru (Princeton, 1989), pp. 84–85Google Scholar; parallels would include the establishment of the oligarchic regime in Argentina following the fall of Rosas and the rise of the tachirenses in Venezuela.
54 Silver remained Mexico's principal export, and mining the most important export sector; this was significant in that a fall in export prices and/or foreign demand had a less profound effect on the domestic economy than it did in countries – such as Cuba or Brazil – which relied heavily on agrarian exports: given the ‘enclave’ nature of the mining sector, the multiplier effect was appreciably less. Hence Mexico was less vulnerable to international recession. Meanwhile, Mexico's agrarian exports grew, but across a diverse range of products; monoculture existed solely as a regional problem – most obviously in the case of Yucatán's henequen.
55 The moradores of the Brazilian north-east, commented a Brazilian senator, were ‘united with the millowners by force of habit, by the influence of ancient customs, by ties of gratitude’; hence they displayed ‘a just and reverential respect toward their landlords’: Graham, Richard, Patronage and Politics in Nineteenth-Century Brazil (Stanford, 1990), pp. 24–25.Google Scholar
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57 On the poor communications and weak market of the Andean zone, see Caballero, José María, Eeonomía agraria de la sierra peruana (Lima, 1981), pp. 296–298.Google Scholar It is arguable that the economic transformation wrought by the railways in Porfirian Mexico in the 1880s had its Andean analogue in the development of roads and trucks after the 1940s: ibid., pp. 301–3 and Wilson, Fiona, ‘The Conflict Between Indigenous and Immigrant Commercial Systems in the Peruvian Central Sierra, 1900–1940’, in Miller, Rory (ed.), Region and Class in Modern Peruvian History (Liverpool, 1987), pp. 125–162.Google Scholar As mentioned above (n. 39) Andean landlords often compensated for market weakness by squeezing tenants and workers, thus provoking protest; but, by the same token, a weak market inhibited the systematic expansion of latifundia in the sierra. Of course, hacienda expansion occurred, and stimulated significant peasant protest, such as the Chayanta revolt in southern Bolivia in 1927 (see Langer, , Economic ChangeGoogle Scholar, ch. 4). The Chayanta revolt, however, while it fell short of the insurrectionary scope and sophistication of Zapatismo, did prove capable of arresting the (comparatively weak) hacienda expansionism of the region; in which respect it more resembled nineteenth-century Mexican peasant movements, such as Chalco's, which were holding operations fought against economically shaky elites, not wars to the death against aggressive agrarian entrepreneurs, such as that fought by the Zapatistas against the Morelos sugar planters.
58 On the Peruvian enganche see Blanchard, Peter, ‘The Recruitment of Workers in the Peruvian Sierra at the Turn of the Century: The enganche System’, Inter-American Economic Affairs, vol. 33 (1979), pp. 63–84Google Scholar, and – concerning consensus and coercion – the debate between Loveman, Brian, ‘Critique of Arnold Bauer's “Rural Workers in Spanish America”’Google Scholar, and Bauer, Arnold, ‘Reply’, Hispanic American Historical Review, vol. 59 (1979), pp. 478–489.Google Scholar
59 Favre, Henri, ‘The dynamics of Indian peasant society and migration to coastal plantations in central Peru’, in Duncan, Kenneth and Rutledge, Ian (eds.), Land and Labour in Latin America (Cambridge, 1977), p. 265Google Scholar; and see also Mallon, , Defense of Community, pp. 156–164.Google Scholar
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61 The chief victims of the expansion of Peru's sugar plantations were agricultores (‘part of a sizeable rural middle class’), rather than communal peasants; their dispossession and resentment helped to stimulate the rise of APRA – a coastal rather than a highland political phenomenon: see Klarén, Peter F., ‘The Social and Economic Consequences of Modernization in the Peruvian Sugar Industry, 1870–1930’, in Duncan, and Rutledge, , Land and Labour, pp. 229–267.Google Scholar
62 In view of the popularity of dependista thinking it is not surprising that exports have frequently been seen as the motor of Latin American (under) development and the root cause of both peasant dispossession and proletarian militancy: Bergquist, Charles, Labor in Latin America. Comparative Essays on Chile, Argentina, Venezuela and Colombia (Stanford, 1986)Google Scholar, is a sophisticated example of this approach. However, Mexican cash crops such as sugar and cotton were primarily produced for the domestic market.
63 Miller, Simon, ‘Land and Labour in Mexican Rural Insurrections’, Bulletin of Latin American Research, vol. 10 (1991), p. 75CrossRefGoogle Scholar presumes (his terminology) that, when I advanced examples of peasant repudiation of the market, I succumbed to the ‘traditional stereotype of the Indian village's communal introversion’ (or, worse still, its ‘idyllic past of collectivism’), which is but one of several odd arguments in this article. I certainly argued that Mexican peasants (I never said ‘Indians’) tended to resist rather than to espouse market production during the Porfiriato (which generalisation is hardly refuted by a couple of colonial citations); however, I both pointed to processes of internal stratification, whereby entrepreneurial rancheros arose from the common ruck of campesinos (Knight, , The Mexican Revolution, vol. 1, pp. 112–115)Google Scholar, and I recognised that ‘some peasants… benefited [from enhanced demand], as suppliers of goods as well as labor’ (Knight, , ‘The U.S. and the Mexican Peasantry’, in Nugent, Daniel (ed.), Rural Revolt in Mexico and U.S. Intervention [San Diego, 1988], pp. 47–48).Google Scholar The crucial point, however, is that most Mexican peasants, especially most revolutionary peasants, tended to regard subsistence production as their chief priority and the market as a threatening rather than a beneficial force.
64 As a rough index of the relative impact of commercialisation, note that between 1874 and 1910 Mexican exports increased tenfold, while population rose 52%; between 1880 and 1913 Argentine exports rose ninefold, while population tripled. The best known statement concerning the need to assess the impact of export-led growth in terms of ‘the particular, historically developed class structures through which these processes worked themselves out’ is that of Brenner, Robert, ‘The Origins of Capitalist Development: A Critique of Neo-Smithian Marxism’, New Left Review, vol. 54 (1977), p. 91.Google Scholar
65 Scott, James C., The Moral Economy of the Peasant: Rebellion and Subsistence in Southeast Asia (New Haven, 1976)Google Scholar, which argument has been usefully developed in the Mexican context by Tutino, , From Insurrection to Revolution, pp. 16–17, 24 and 27.Google Scholar
66 See Samuel Popkin, L., The Rational Peasant. The Political Economy of Rural Society in Vietnam (Berkeley, 1979).Google Scholar These arguments are echoed, in the Mexican context, by Vanderwood, Paul J., ‘Explaining the Mexican Revolution’, in Jaime, Rodríguez O. (ed.), The Revolutionary Process in Mexico. Essays on Political and Social Change, 1880–1940 (Los Angeles, 1990), p. 101.Google Scholar
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68 McNeill, William H., Plagues and Peoples (Oxford, 1977), pp. 6–7ff.Google Scholar
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74 Heroics, Jesús Reyes, El liberalismo mexicano (3 vols., Mexico, 1957–1961)Google Scholar offers a paean to Mexican liberalism, celebrating – and perhaps exaggerating – its broad, popular, democratic and inclusionary character; as Hale, , Transformation of Mexican Liberalism, pp. 14–15Google Scholar, points out, this magisterial work significantly neglects the Porfiriato. For a contrasting view, which stresses the pervasive religiosity of Mexican people, see Meyer, Jean, La Cristiada (3 vols., Mexico, 1973–4), vol. 2, pp. 19 and 28, vol. 3, pp. 282 and 304.Google Scholar
75 Warman, , ‘The Political Project of Zapatismo’Google Scholar, argues against Zapatista parochialism, not altogether convincingly. It is worth mentioning that many revolutionary movements, and not simply those of peasant provenance, displayed a strong attachment to the patria chica: for example, the mapaches of Chiapas or the soberanistas of Oaxaca (both led by landlord elites): see Benjamin, , A Rich Land, pp. 123–126Google Scholar, and Garner, ‘Oaxaca’. Conversely, the Zapatistas did entertain a lively notion of the nation. My point would be that Zapatista patriotism, premised on a strong identification with the patria chica, was inherently decentralising, even anarchist; while the patriotism of other revolutionary groups – such as the victorious Sonorans – tended to merge patria chica and patria grande in a powerful centralising ethos, which (in contradiction to ‘patriotism’) might better be designated ‘nationalism’.
76 The ‘Great/Little Tradition’ dichotomy may be crude, but – in my view – it still has its uses: e.g. Knight, Alan, ‘Revolutionary Project, Recalcitrant People: Mexico, 1910–40’, in Jaime, Rodríguez O. (ed.), The Revolutionary Process in Mexico: Essays on Political and Social Change, 1880–1940 (Los Angeles, 1990), pp. 231ff.Google Scholar
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78 Bricker, Victoria Reifler, The Indian Christ, the Indian King. The Historical Substrate of Maya Myth and Ritual (Austin, 1981)Google Scholar, chs. 5 and 9.
79 Taylor, , Homicide, Drinking and Rebellion, pp. 114ff.Google Scholar
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81 Wasserstrom, , Class and Society, pp. 102–103Google Scholar, notes that the Spaniards of Chiapas tended to tolerate heterodox Indian cults ‘except in times of political uncertainty’.
82 Van Young, , ‘Millennium on the Northern Marches’Google Scholar and ‘Quetzalcoatl’.
83 Bricker, , The Indian ChristGoogle Scholar, ch. 8. Paul Vanderwood's work-in-progress on the Tomochi revolt stresses its religious and messianic character: ‘Comparing Mexican Independence with the Revolution: Causes, Concepts and Pitfalls’, in Rodríguez, (ed.), The Independence of Mexico, pp. 321–322Google Scholar, and the same author's ‘God's Law versus State Rule: Tomóchic, 1891–1892’, paper given at the Conference on ‘Popular Culture, State Formation and the Mexican Revolution’, Center for US-Mexican Studies, University of California, San Diego, 27 Feb–2 March 1991. In this respect Vanderwood differs from Francisco Almada, R., La rebelión de Tomochi (Chihuahua, 1938)Google Scholar, who explains the revolt in terms of secular politics and factionalism.
84 De Queiroz, Maria Isaura Pereira, O messianismo no Brasil e no Mundo (Sāo Paulo, 1965), pp. 139–308.Google Scholar
85 Good examples are: Díaz, Fernando Díaz, Caudillos y caciques (México, 1972)Google Scholar; Meyer, Jean, Esperando a Lozada (México, 1984)Google Scholar; and Olveda, Jaime, Gordiano Guzmán, uncacique del siglo XIX (México, 1980).Google Scholar
86 Meyer, , La Cristiada, vol. 3, ch. 4.Google Scholar
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89 Taylor, , Drinking, Homicide and Rebellion, p. 126Google Scholar, attributes the relative weakness of Mexican messianism at least in part to the absence of ‘messianic leadership by hereditary native nobles’. On the contrasting roles of the Indian nobility (caciques/kurakas) in Mesoamerica and the Andes compare, for example, Gibson, Charles, The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule: A History of the Indians of the Valley of Mexico, 1519–1810 (Stanford, 1964), pp. 154–165Google Scholar (which concludes, p. 163: ‘by late colonial times cacique status could in some degree buttress a family's prestige but it could no longer in itself be regarded as a rank of major authority’) and Rasnake, Roger Neil, Domination and Cultural Resistance: Authority and Power among an Andean People (Durham, 1988).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
90 Hu Dehart, Evelyn, ‘The Yaqui Indians of Sonora’, in Katz, (ed.), Riot, Rebellion and Revolution, pp. 148–149.Google Scholar
91 Salvucci, Richard, Textiles and Capitalism in Mexico: An Economic History of the Obrajes, 1539–1840 (Princeton, 1987), p. 18Google Scholar, citing Woodrow Borah.
92 Hassig, Ross, Trade, Tribute and Transportation. The Sixteenth-Century Political Economy of the Valley of Mexico (Norman, 1985), p. 149Google Scholar; Macleod, Murdo J., ‘Forms and Types of Work and the Acculturation of the Colonial Indians of Mesoamerica: Some Preliminary Observations’, in Frost, (ed.), El Trabajo, p. 80.Google Scholar
93 Brading, , The First America, p. 138Google Scholar; Mariátegui, José Carlos, Seven Interpretive Essays on Peruvian Reality (Austin, 1988), pp. 180–181.Google Scholar ‘Pluralism’ is used here in Furnivall's sense: it denotes a society ‘of disparate parts which owes its existence to external factors and lacks a common social will’: Smith, M. G., The Plural Society in the British West Indies (Berkeley, 1974), p. vii.Google Scholar The relative absence of paternalistic colonial authority in the Andean highlands – as compared to Mexico – was stressed by the visitador–general José Antonio de Areche in 1777: see Borah, Woodrow, Justice by Insurance. The General Indian Court of Colonial Mexico and the Legal Aides of the Half-Real (Berkeley, 1983), p. 411.Google Scholar
94 Ricard, Robert, The Spiritual Conquest of Mexico (Berkeley, 1966)Google Scholar; Brading, , The First America, p. 103.Google Scholar
95 Lafaye, Jacques, Quetzalcoatl and Guadalupe: The Formation of Mexican National Consciousness, 1531–1813 (Chicago, 1976)Google Scholar; Brading, D. A., The Origins of Mexican Nationalism (Cambridge, 1985), pp. 9–14.Google Scholar
96 Womack, , Zapata, pp. 70–71.Google Scholar Similarly, the Opatas of Sonora (1904) ‘do not like to be regarded as Indians; they prefer to be called “Mexicans”’; indeed, they claimed a ‘patriotic’ lineage dating back to the 1830s: Sheridan, Thomas E., Where the Dove Calls: The Political Ecology of a Peasant Corporate Community in Northwestern Mexico (Tucson, 1988), pp. 18 and 22Google Scholar (quoting Ales Hrdlicka).
97 Womack, , Zapata, pp. 100–102.Google Scholar There were colonial premonitions of this more ‘relaxed’ attitude toward ‘Indian’ revolt, at least in central Mexico: Taylor, , Drinking, Homicide and Rebellion, pp. 120–121.Google Scholar The situation in the Andes was clearly different: fears of caste war and ‘racist polarization’ remained strong and were, if anything, aggravated in the late nineteenth century: Tristan Platt, ‘The Andean Experience of Bolivian Liberalism, 1825–1900: Roots of Rebellion in 19th-Century Chayanta (Potosí)’, in Stern, Resistance, pp. 315–20. Half a century later, the Bolivian revolution, by giving land and votes to the Indians and creating a network of powerful campesino caciques, revived these fears: ‘in Achacachi… an Aymara peasant leader has established a little dominion for himself, issuing permits to go through the district. As this is only two hours drive from La Paz there is distinct nervousness in the city and nobody is very anxious for the government to adopt firm measures as they fear a massacre’: report of J. Thynne Henderson to Foreign Office, 23 Dec. 1959, FO 371/148757, AX 1015/1.
98 Meyer, Jean, Esperando a Lozada, pp. 235–256Google Scholar, concludes his analysis of the Lozada movement by pointing to an ‘obvious’ feature of nineteenth-century Mexican history, namely, ‘the tight links which bind rural movements and national history together’ (p. 256).
99 Katz, , ‘Rural rebellions after 1810’, p. 555.Google Scholar
100 See Dix, Robert H., Colombia: The Political Dimensions of Change (New Haven, 1967), pp. 203ff.Google Scholar, concerning the ‘hereditary hatreds’ of Colombian politics (p. 211) which, Dix stresses (p. 213), spanned social classes, and were not confined to warring elites.
101 Stevens, D. F., Origins of Instability in Early Republican Mexico (Durham, N.C., 1991), p. 113.Google Scholar
102 For an excellent study of the political economy of Puebla see Thomson, Guy, Puebla de los Angeles. Industry and Society in a Mexican City (Boulder, 1989)Google Scholar, ch. 5; Sowell, David, ‘The 1893 bogotazo: Artisans and Public Violence in Late Nineteenth-Century Bogotá’, journal of Latin American Studies, vol. 21 (1989), pp. 267–282CrossRefGoogle Scholar, describes the political activism of Bogotá's artisans and their shift (roughly) from the liberal to the conservative camp. Again, there are interesting parallels with revolutionary France: Hunt, , Politics, Culture and Class, pp. 152–153.Google Scholar
103 Wasserstrom, , Class and Society, p. 126Google Scholar, on San Cristóbal; for Colombia, see Delpar, Helen, Red Against Blue. The Liberal Party in Colombian Politics, 1863–1899 (University of Alabama, 1989), pp. 29, 34–35 and 41.Google Scholar
104 For a forthright and stimulating statement of this position, see Tutino, John, ‘Patterns of Culture in Mexican History: From Colonial Hegemony to National Conflict’Google Scholar, paper given at the VIII Conference of Mexican and North American Historians, San Diego, 19 Oct. 1990. Similar assumptions – concerning the un- or anti-popular character of liberalism – are to be found in European historiography: e.g., Hobsbawm, Eric, ‘Mass-Producing Traditions: Europe 1870–1914’, in Hobsbawm, Eric and Ranger, Terence (eds.), The Invention of Tradition (Cambridge, 1983), p. 268.Google Scholar
105 Díaz, Díaz, caudillos y caciquesGoogle Scholar; Thomson, Guy P., ‘Agrarian Conflict in the Municipality of Cuetzalán (Sierra de Puebla)Google Scholar: The Rise and Fall of “Pala” Agustín Dieguillo, 1861–1894’, Hispanic American Historical Review, vol. 71 (1991), pp. 205–258.Google Scholar On the appeal of liberal federalism in Oaxaca, see Pastor, Rodolfo, Campesinos y reformat: La Mixteca, 1700–1856 (México, 1987), pp. 447–448.Google Scholar
106 Nugent, Daniel, ‘Land, Labor and Politics in a Serrano Society: The Articulation of State and Popular Ideology in Mexico’, PhD diss., Univ. of Chicago, 1988.Google Scholar
107 In Oaxaca, for example: Berry, Charles R., The Reform in Oaxaca. A Microhistory of the Liberal Revolution (Lincoln, 1981), pp. 163, 165–166, 177 and 187Google Scholar; Pastor, , Campesinos y reformas, pp. 472 and 513–514.Google ScholarJacobs, , Ranchero RevoltGoogle Scholar, and Schryer, Frans J., The Rancheros of Pisaflores. The History of a Peasant Bourgeoisie in Twentieth-Century Mexico (Toronto, 1980)Google Scholar, offer good examples of liberal ranchero communities in central Mexico; Brading, D. A., The Origins of Mexican Nationalism (Cambridge, 1985), pp. 96–98Google Scholar, discusses the socio-economic bases of popular liberalism in general.
108 Voss, Stuart, On the Periphery of Nineteenth-Century Mexico: Sonora and Sinaloa, 1810–1877 (Tucson, 1982), pp. 50 and 80–81Google Scholar, on the weakness of the Church in the north-west. Popular anticlericalism and irreligion have been little studied and, perhaps, underestimated. For some examples: Green, Stanley C., The Mexican Republic: The First Decade, 1823–1832 (Pittsburgh, 1987), pp. 217–218Google Scholar; Roeder, Ralph, Juárez and his Mexico (2 vols., New York, 1968), vol. 1, pp. 56–57.Google Scholar During the Revolution, voceadores allegedly sold their newspapers more briskly by flipping them open at the pages containing Orozco's (often virulently anticlerical) cartoons: Reed, Alma, Orozco (New York, 1956), pp. 6–7Google Scholar; were there nineteenth-century precedents for this sales pitch?
109 ‘Fear and even terror of military retribution might restore order’, Christen Archer writes of the Spanish counter-insurgency of the 1810s, ‘but in their hearts the Mexicans had come to abhor Spaniards and Spanish rule’: ‘“La Causa Buena”: The Counterinsurgency Army of New Spain and the Ten Years War’, in Rodríguez, (ed.), Independence of Mexico, p. 91.Google Scholar
110 Sims, Harold, La expulsión de los españoles de México, 1821–1828 (México, 1974)Google Scholar; Cabellero, Romeo Flores, Counterrevolution. The Role of the Spaniards in the Independence of Mexico, 1804–1838 (Lincoln, 1974)Google Scholar, chs. 5–8.
111 Mallon, Florencia, ‘Politics and State-Formation in Nineteenth-Century Mexico. Morelos, 1848–1858’, Political Power and Social Theory, 7 (1988), pp. 1–54Google Scholar; Brading, D. A., The Origins of Mexican Nationalism (Cambridge, 1985), pp. 93–94Google Scholar; Knight, Alan, U.S.–Mexican Relations, 1910–1940 (San Diego, 1987), pp. 58–59 and 64–67.Google Scholar
112 Staples, Ann, ‘Panorama Educative al Comienzo de la Vida Independiente’, in Vázquez, Josefina Zoraida et al. (eds.), Ensayos sobre historia de la educatión en México (México, 1983), pp. 153–154Google Scholar; Jacobs, , Ranchero Revolt, pp. 20–21.Google Scholar Again, note the parallel with Colombia: Delpar, Red Against Blue, pp. 48–9.
113 The Zapata family offers an example of popular rural liberal affiliation; the Cabrera family of petty-bourgeois, urban allegiance. See Wornack, , sZapata, pp. 399–400Google Scholar; Meyer, Eugenia, Luis Cabrera: teórico y crítico de la Revolutión (México, 1972), pp. 11–13 and 203–204.Google Scholar On Colombia, see Delpar, , Red Against Blue, pp. 40–41 and 50Google Scholar, and Dix, , Colombia, pp. 211ff.Google Scholar
114 Recent work by Guy Thomson and Florencia Mallon stresses the importance of wartime mobilisation in the formation of popular political affiliations in Morelos and Puebla: see, for example, Thomson, , ‘Agrarian Conflict’ and ‘Bulwarks of Patriotic Liberalism: The National Guard, Philharmonic Corps and Patriotic Juntas in Mexico, 1847–1888’, Journal of Latin American Studies, vol. 22, no. 1 (1990), pp. 31–68CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mallon, Florencia, ‘Popular Liberalism and Popular Culture: An Andean-Mexican Comparison of Peasant Consciousness in Historical Motion’Google Scholar, paper given at the Conference on ‘Popular Culture, State Formation, and the Mexican Revolution’, Center for US–Mexican Studies, University of California San Diego, 27 Feb–2 March 1991.
115 Dix, , Colombia, pp. 240–244Google Scholar; and for vivid biographical details, Y Donny Meertens, Gonzalo Sánchez, Bandoleros, gamonales y campesinos: El caso de la violencia en Colombia (Bogotá, 1983).Google Scholar On revolutionary and postrevolutionary France (specifically, La Sarthe): Bois, Paul, Paysans de l'Ouest (Paris, 1975).Google Scholar
116 A similar distinction – between ‘sentiment evocation’ and ‘ideological persuasion’ – is put forward by Lincoln, Bruce, Discourse and the Construction of Society. Comparative Studies of Myth, Ritual and Classification (Oxford, 1989), p. 10.Google Scholar
117 As I have argued elsewhere, I have my doubts about the strength and precocity of the supposed ‘Leviathan’ state which many experts see rising in the immediate aftermath of the armed Revolution: Knight, Alan, ‘The Mexican Revolution: Bourgeois? Nationalist? Or Just a “Great Rebellion”?’, Bulletin of Latin American Research (1985), pp. 1–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
118 For an excellent résumé, see Sánchez, Gonzalo, ‘The Violence: An Interpretative Synthesis’, in Bergquist, Charles et al. (eds.), Violence in Colombia. The Contemporary Crisis in Historical Perspective (Wilmington, 1992), pp. 75–124.Google Scholar
119 On the politico-cultural significance of the brass band, see Thomson, , ‘Bulwarks of Patriotic Liberalism’.Google Scholar
120 Brading, , The First America, p. 662.Google Scholar Nicaraguan liberalism, too, acquired powerful patriotic and emotive force, not least thanks to the exploits of Sandino – who, himself, had been strongly influenced by Mexican examples and traditions: Hodges, Donald C., Intellectual Foundations of the Nicaraguan Revolution (Austin, 1986), especially pp. 80–85.Google Scholar
121 Perry, Laurens Ballard, Juárez and Díaz: Machine Politics in Mexico (DeKalb, 1978)Google Scholar, dissects the practical failures of Juarista liberalism.
122 Dabbs, Jack Autrey, The French Army in Mexico, 1861–1867 (The Hague, 1963), pp. 85, 123, 131, 145 and 219–237.Google Scholar
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124 Lee Woodward, Ralph Jr., ‘Changes in the Nineteenth-Century Guatemalan State and its Indian Policies’, in Smith, , Guatemalan Indians, pp. 60–70Google Scholar; Micelli, Keith, ‘Rafael Carrera: Defender and Promoter of Peasant Interests in Guatemala, 1837–1848’, The Americas, vol. 31 (1974), pp. 72–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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131 Smith, Carol A., ‘Origins of the National Question in Guatemala: A Hypothesis’, in Smith, , Guatemalan Indians, pp. 83–92Google Scholar, on the ‘redrawing (of) national divisions’ along ethnic lines following the Carrera period.
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148 Casanova, Pablo González, Democracy in Mexico (Oxford, 1970), pp. 124–126.Google Scholar
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179 The most celebrated recent case is that of the oil workers’ boss, Joaquín Hernandez Galicia, La Quina. For other, more humdrum, examples of cacical impermanence, see Saldaña, Tomás Martínez and Mendoza, Leticia Gándara, Política y sociedad en México: el caso de los Altos de Jalisco (México, 1976), p. 70Google Scholar; Márquez, , ‘Gonzalo N. Santos’, pp. 392–393Google Scholar; Roxborough, Ian, Unions and Politics in Mexico. The Case of the Automobile Industry (Cambridge, 1984), pp. 80, 86, 101 and 105–106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
180 For example, Schryer, , Ethnicity and Class Conflict, pp. 259–266.Google Scholar
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182 Knight, Alan, ‘Racism, Revolution and Indigenismo: Mexico, 1910–1940’, in Graham, Richard (ed.), The Idea of Race in Latin America, 1870–1940 (Austin, 1990), pp. 71–114.Google Scholar As an official ideology Mexican indigenismo has its faults, both theoretical and practical; but it can hardly be said to suffer from comparison with, for example, Guatemalan official thinking on the ‘Indian question'; indeed, some Guatemalan spokesmen, subscribing to the view that ‘all that is good in Mexico…is Latin’, saw fit to ‘decry the indigenista fervor in Mexico’: Adams, Richard N., ‘Ethnic Images and Strategies in 1944’ in Smith, , Guatemalan Indians, p. 147.Google Scholar
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189 O'malley, Ilene V., The Myth of the Revolution: Hero Cults and the Institutionalization of the Mexican State, 1920–1940 (Westport, Conn., 1981)Google Scholar; Knight, , ‘Revolutionary Project’, p. 249.Google Scholar As Renan also argues, the formation of a national consciousness involves not just celebratory commemoration, but also a certain selective amnesia: ‘l’oubli, et je dirai même l'erreur historique, sont un facteur essential de la création de la nation’: ‘Qu'estce qu'une nation?’, p. 891.
190 Hence the interesting (alleged) reaction of a prominent revolutionary – ‘perhaps the fiercest enemy of Catholicism in Mexico’ – who, when his gringo interlocutor concurred that ‘in 400 years there had never really been a really decent Mexican bishop or priest’, ‘looked startled for a minute, and then turned purple with anger. “What do you mean?” he roared. “Everybody knows Mexico has produced some of the greatest figures in all the history of the church!”’: Sands, William Franklin, Our jungle Diplomacy (Chapel Hill, 1944), p. 157.Google Scholar
191 Hall, Linda, ‘Banks, Oil, and the Reinstitutionalization of the Mexican State’, in Rodríguez, , Revolutionary Process, pp. 189–211Google Scholar; Knight, , US-Mexican RelationsGoogle Scholar, ch. 5.
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197 Gilly, Adolfo (coord.), Cartas a Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas (México, 1989), e.g., pp. 50, 133 and 204.Google Scholar
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199 For example, Sanders, Sol, Mexico: Chaos On Our Doorstep (Lanham, Md., 1986).Google Scholar
200 Comment of Luis Téllez, Subsecretary of Agriculture, University of Texas at Austin Binational Colloquium on Mexican Agriculture, 15–16 Nov. 1990. Things have moved fast: in November 1991 President Salinas committed his administration to privatising the ejido: see Proceso, 11 Nov. 1991, pp. 6–17.Google Scholar
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202 The yet more recent elections of August 1991 revealed considerable support for the PRI, not least in regions – like the Federal District – where the ruling party had fared badly in 1988. Again, however, there were allegations of fraud and, in two cases where powerful opposition candidates lost gubernatorial contests in contentious circumstances (Guanajuato and San Luis Potosí), the winning PRI candidates subsequently stood down (or were stood down by presidential order). Again, therefore, we see an administration sensitive to adverse opinion but reluctant to take its chances in entirely limpid elections.
203 Knight, , ‘The Mexican Revolution’, p. 47.Google Scholar
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