Introduction
As detailed by Karl Marx in The Eighteenth Brumaire, in periods of revolutionary crisis people conjure up ‘the spirits of the past to their service and borrow from them names, battle-cries, and costumes in order to present the new scene of world history in this time-honoured disguise and this borrowed language’.Footnote 1 My focus in this article is the manner in which, echoing Marx again, ‘the tradition of all the dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brain of the living’, by focusing on the Monument to the Revolution in Mexico. This monument is one of the foremost commemorative spatial sites of state power in Mexico City. Completed on 20 November 1938, the Monument to the Revolution has served ever since as the stage for official ceremonies remembering and honouring the Revolution and its heroes, protagonists and antagonists. As Thomas Benjamin states:
The Monument to the Revolution was built, primarily, to heal the wounds of memory that divided revolutionaries and retarded and weakened the development of a new institutional political order … The monument's primary purpose has always been and remains the legitimisation of state power and authority.Footnote 2
In 2010, renovations to the site were announced by then Mayor of the Federal District, Marcelo Ebrard (affiliated to the opposition Partido de la Revolución Democrática – Revolutionary Democratic Party, PRD), who remarked that the recuperation of public space would be accompanied by the remembrance of the great achievements of the Mexican Revolution, including labour rights, agrarian reform, access to education and health, Mexican nationalism, and, of course, the oil expropriation (the nationalisation of petroleum reserves, facilities, and foreign oil companies). The Monument to the Revolution and the Plaza de la República in which the monument stands – a space of 49,000 m2 – has now been completely renovated. At a cost of US$ 25 million, the restoration included a Mirador (Observation Deck) – reached via a new glass elevator located in the Monument's central axis – that offers 360° views of Mexico City; nocturnal illumination; the ‘Adelita Café’ and gift shop; water fountains that were now, finally, functional; the reopening of the National Museum of the Revolution; and, since 2013, the ‘Paseo Cimentación’, offering access to the foundations of the base of the monument.
On 20 November 2010, with the re-inauguration of the site, Marcelo Ebrard made a call to realise a ‘new revolution’ in the country but via a peaceful route based on democratic norms and the retaking of the ideals of the armed struggle that had exploded in 1910 for greater social justice. He declared: ‘the new Plaza de la República will soon reunite us to celebrate the triumph of the left and the values advanced in Mexico’.Footnote 3 As one contemporary tourist pamphlet linked to this icon of Mexico City also boasts, ‘visitors can enjoy a rich spatial experience’ at the Monument to the Revolution. But how are the multiple trajectories and everyday lived experiences of this space best understood? If space is conceived as the ‘simultaneity of stories-so-far’, following Doreen Massey, what does the Monument to the Revolution reveal about Mexico's ‘grand performances of state’ across time?Footnote 4
The purpose of this article is to analyse the different functions of capitalist space in modern Mexico through the lived experience of the Monument to the Revolution and to assert a focus on monuments as a way of writing history about the urban landscape and the modern state.Footnote 5 As Henri Lefebvre states,
societies thought that they received and transmitted natural space … But if there is a history of space, if there is a specificity to space according to periods, societies, modes and relations of production, then there is a space of capitalism.Footnote 6
But what is the space that capitalism produces in the built environment of the city form, as a cradle of accumulation, and what are the different functions of capitalist space in relation to modern state formation? My perspective is one that acknowledges that the extant literature has either crucially asserted the significance of space within the post-revolutionary state of Mexico or significantly focused on the Monument to the Revolution to understand how monuments transform space.Footnote 7 Yet such endeavours have paradoxically done so in such a way as to produce a despatialised view of the development of capitalism, which means providing few theoretical signposts for dealing with social, political and economic differences across space despite the point that conceptions of spatiality, or their apparent absence, have had profound implications throughout history.Footnote 8 My central argument, then, is that the ways in which the state organises space in our everyday lives through the streets we walk, the monuments we visit, and the places where we meet can be appreciated by an approach linked to Antonio Gramsci's understanding of the condition of ‘passive revolution’, referring to a set of constructed and contested class practices, where aspects of the social relations of capitalist development are either instituted and/or expanded, resulting in both ‘revolutionary’ rupture and a ‘restoration’ of social relations across different scales and spatial aspects of the state.Footnote 9 But a critical questioning of the notion of passive revolution also needs to be maintained when engaging alternative contexts, which will be undertaken in this article. A set of theoretical departure points, derived from both Antonio Gramsci and Henri Lefebvre, will therefore assist in revealing modernism not simply as a Western implant, a derivative particularisation of a universal type, but as a universal process that can exist only in particularity. A focus on what is called here everyday passive revolution, linked to localised conditions of modernity and architectural codifications of power, thus breaks new ground by tying together state–civil society struggles in the production of space in modern Mexico. It does so by examining forms of state formation through the condition of everyday passive revolution; this becomes then a way of studying the spaces of class struggle as a correlate to literature focusing on the historical sociology of the modern state.Footnote 10 Moreover, how the force of capital comes to change the meaning of the production of space and place is significant in attempting to address the different functions of capitalist space across time. Architecture, as an expression of everyday passive revolution, may therefore reveal something meaningful about modernity's translation within the spatial context of peripheral geographies across different periods of history.
The article proceeds to deliver this argument by, first, detailing the theoretical departure points drawn from Antonio Gramsci and Henri Lefebvre in order to gain a purchase on Mexican modernity through the Monument to the Revolution as a condition of everyday passive revolution. In order to address the different functions of capitalist space, a second section chronicles a periodisation of the Monument to the Revolution in order to assess the political economy of space and place construction across different periods of history. Mentioning briefly the antiguo régimen of the Porfirio Díaz dictatorship (1876–1910), the focus in this second main section moves from the legacies of the Porfiriato to how these concrete residues were configured into the subsequent Monument to the Revolution. My analysis then embarks on detailing several overlapping periods shaping everyday passive revolution linked to the Monument to the Revolution. These include the periods of (1) state power (1933–68); (2) state crisis (1968–80s); and (3) state rollback (1980s–present), albeit acknowledging that these are not discrete instances but, rather, to use Doreen Massey's term, co-implicated trajectories. The article then closes by offering some reflections on everyday passive revolution as an expression of wider forms of cosmopolitan modernism.Footnote 11 Overall, then, the aim is to ‘describe, analyse, and theorise these distinctive meanings, practices, trajectories, transformations and consequences of modernist architecture in developing countries in the mid-twentieth century’.Footnote 12 Or, put differently, to reveal how modernist architecture in peripheral geographical spaces has a shared spatiality and temporality that is nevertheless also expressive of an active, original and unique (rather than simply imitative, derivative and imported) process.
Departure Points on Lived Space
As an opening proposition on conceiving space, any stark division that slices through space and time by diminishing their relationality is to be avoided in order to highlight space as a product of social relations coexisting across time. Time (history) and space (geography) should therefore be considered as co-implicated in order that we can recognise the open-ended multiplicities and trajectories of space–time.Footnote 13 From this stance, a thread can be pulled to develop new thoughts on conceiving lived space and time by weaving together an understanding of the spatiality and history of power relations. The first of these strands comes from a hitherto neglected set of insights on lived space drawn from Antonio Gramsci.
Beyond the Territory-museum of History
With regard to the challenges posed by the fragmented process of state formation and hegemony in Italy during the Risorgimento (1860–1) – conditions that were themselves imposed by regionally distinct social contestations over territory – Gramsci drew attention to two types of foreign intellectuals within the peninsula. There were those that came to assimilate its living culture under the guidance of Italian intellectuals, with the latter attempting but failing to organise a national culture and acquire consciousness across Italy as a territory. In contrast, reference is then made to those intellectuals ‘who came to look at Italy as a territory-museum of history’ based on a cosmopolitanism divorced from national history.Footnote 14 Akin to a foreign flâneur – the literary type of urban explorer and connoisseur of modern urbanism – the new intellectual ‘believes himself [sic] to be endowed with great social dignity; his mode of existence is “eloquence” that stirs the emotion’ as constructor, organiser and permanent persuader.Footnote 15 Written across different notebooks in November 1930, these preliminary sketches on space and place construction by Gramsci can be related to one of his most fascinating vignettes on the scalar spaces of state power. Penned at the same time, again in 1930, Gramsci's interest is drawn in this note to what he refers to as the ‘material structure of ideology’ referring to:
how the ideological structure of a ruling class is actually organised: that is, the material organisation meant to preserve, defend and develop the theoretical or ideological ‘front’.Footnote 16
Paramount here in his analysis is reference to the role played by the press in general, publishing houses, libraries, schools, the church, associations and clubs, as well as the very spatial grid and layout of streets and their names. As he goes on to indicate, all these factors should be evaluated in order to ‘inculcate the habit of assessing the forces of agency in society with greater caution and precision’.Footnote 17
In a further note from 1930 entitled ‘The New Architecture’, the changing character of cityscapes in rapidly developing contexts is remarked on, with Gramsci noting that skyscrapers in the United States, as ‘great architectural art’, can be born only after wider basic needs – as part of a broader sense of an architectural complex consisting of streets, squares, gardens and parks – have been fulfilled.Footnote 18 This is where the context of passive revolution becomes relevant, because it is through the relationship between the urban and the rural that the reorganisation of state power and associated class relations is projected, which assists in understanding the expansion of capitalism as a mode of production.
In Italy there have been the beginnings of a Fordist fanfare: exaltation of big cities, overall planning for the Milan conurbation, etc.; the affirmation that capitalism is only at its beginnings and that it is necessary to prepare for it grandiose patterns of development.Footnote 19
Captured here are the territorial, spatial and geographical dimensions of uneven development as well as the combined character of its crystallisation within a social formation. The reorganisation of the labour process enacted by the introduction of new methods of rationalisation, regulation and disciplining as well as their impact on familial arrangements, the gendered division of labour, and cultural and ideological forms that were all manifested within ‘Americanism and Fordism’, led Gramsci to a profound questioning of the spatial and temporal spread of capitalism.
According to Gramsci, now writing in 1932, there were at least two different but linked registers of the spatial and temporal spread of capitalism experienced through the condition of passive revolution. First there is reference to the ‘historical fact that popular initiative is missing from the development of Italian history’, or a recognition of elite-engineered social and political reform that draws on foreign capital and associated ideas while lacking a national–popular base.Footnote 20 At the same time, however, the notion of passive revolution is linked in this note to an alternate, second, sense to capture how a revolutionary form of political transformation is pressed into a conservative project of restoration while lacking a radical national–popular moment. It refers here to
the fact that ‘progress’ occurs as the reaction of the dominant classes to the sporadic and incoherent rebelliousness of the popular masses – a reaction consisting of ‘restorations’ that agree to some part of the popular demands and are therefore ‘progressive restorations’, or ‘revolutions-restorations’, or even ‘passive revolutions’.Footnote 21
‘The problem’, as Antonio Gramsci states, ‘is to see whether in the dialectic of “revolution/restoration” it is revolution or restoration which predominates’.Footnote 22 What is key to a passive revolution, then, is the manner in which state space, or the institutional materiality of the state, comes to bear on the developmental process. Hence the ‘significance of a “Piedmont”-type function in passive revolutions – i.e. the fact that a state replaces the local social groups in leading a struggle of renewal’.Footnote 23 Overall, then, a passive revolution is signposted by a ‘statisation’ of civil society, a situation when the ruling class is unable to fully integrate the people through conditions of hegemony, or when ‘they were aiming at the creation of a modern state … [but] in fact produced a bastard’.Footnote 24
As alluded to earlier, though, there is the potential pitfall of diffusionist reasoning that can edge into the notion of passive revolution, meaning that capitalism is surveyed through a wave of diffusion unfolding outward from advanced centres of capitalist development to the non-European periphery without there taking place an examination of the conditions of social struggle, appropriation and assimilation in the latter.Footnote 25 This is most clearly expressed by Gramsci, when stating that
the impetus of progress is not tightly linked to a vast local economic development … but is instead the reflection of international developments which transmit their ideological currents to the periphery – currents born of the productive development of the more advanced countries.Footnote 26
This opens up a challenge as to whether passive revolution can avoid a diffusionist reading and address the complexity of local everyday lived relations of state power. After all, for Gramsci with regard to passive revolution, ‘the conception remains a dialectical one – in other words, presupposes, indeed postulates as necessary, a vigorous antithesis’.Footnote 27 How, then, can the potential homogenising spaces of capitalism be revealed more dialectically as moments of rupture, which establish spaces of difference or differential space?
The Right to the Production of Space
The second thread to weave through a focus on space and how the modern state constitutes conditions of everyday passive revolution involves recourse to the dialectical production of capitalist space addressed by Henri Lefebvre. In The Production of Space, Lefebvre asserts that ‘any definition of architecture itself requires a prior analysis and exposition of the concept of space’ and, subsequently, that, ‘monumental buildings mask the will to power and the arbitrariness of power beneath the signs and surfaces which claim to express collective will and collective thought’.Footnote 28 Congruent with Lefebvre, capitalism produces an abstract space with the city form as a cradle of accumulation generating surplus value.Footnote 29 Dominant social practices therefore suffuse abstract space in order to reduce contradictions and diffuse legitimating ideology through the social fabric whereby ‘desire and needs are uncoupled, then crudely put back together’ by the articulation of ‘tranquilising ideas’.Footnote 30 The urban form is therefore replete with dominant class rule using abstract space as a mode of organising the means of production to generate profit.Footnote 31 As such, the accumulation of capital within the urban form relies on the production of surplus value (for instance, through investments in urbanisation, in air space, or the tourism industry); the realisation of surplus value (for example, through the organisation of urban consumption and everyday life); and the allocation of surplus value (such as in ground rents).Footnote 32 Having acknowledged the city form as intrinsic to the accumulation, realisation and distribution of surplus value, though, it would be mistaken to reduce this critique of political economy to urban space at the neglect of the rural–urban dialectic. As Lefebvre clearly puts it, ‘surplus value is initially formed in the countryside’.Footnote 33
However, it is the modern state that claims a right to the production of space. ‘The state uses space in such a way that it ensures its control of places, its strict hierarchy, the homogeneity of the whole, and the segregation of the parts.’Footnote 34 A logic of homogeneity is projected through state space and its claims to arbitrate, occupy, map, control, reproduce and contain. The state mode of production is specifically characterised by the hegemony of abstract space, according to Lefebvre. This is where ‘the state becomes more clearly the agent, even the guiding hand, of this production’ of space.Footnote 35 In answer to his own question, ‘Is it conceivable that the exercise of hegemony might leave space untouched?’, Lefebvre responds by arguing that
the concept of hegemony was introduced by Gramsci in order to describe the future role of the working class in the building of a new society, but it is also useful for analysing the action of the bourgeoisie, especially in relation to space.Footnote 36
Through the abstract space of capitalism, then, a monument or work of architecture can be situated within the triumphal rise of the state, as a spatial support, engaged in the partitioning of space to subdue a class-divided civil society.Footnote 37 This is where ‘the state is consolidating on a world scale … imposing analogous, if not homologous, measures irrespective of political ideology, historical background, or the class origins of those in power’.Footnote 38
The transformation of space also, of course, produces its own contradictions. Alongside them, the abstract space produced by capitalism, with its homogenising and repetitive tendencies is, then, also the intervention of class struggle in the right to the production of space and the snowballing of spatial differences.Footnote 39 This means addressing how the spatial role of the state also produces contradictions that shape counter-spaces attempting to thwart state strategies. Such contradictions unfold in space and therefore become contradictions of space when a place is marked as different within the urban complex. Differential space therefore refers to contrasts, oppositions, juxtapositions (or heterotopias) that are articulated within and against the homogenising structures of state space (or isotopies). Isotopies cover the long straight lines, broad avenues, voids (‘enormous plazas, nocturnal squares’) and empty perspectives of the urban form that become increasingly subjected to the dynamics of capitalism, whereas heterotopias refer to the places of the other, the distant orders, the cuts and sutures across the urban grid where revolt, the presentation of counter-projects and violent protest may unfold.Footnote 40 The formation of spaces of difference, or differential space, thus represents for capitalism an antagonistic and ruinous tendency.
A political economy of space and its production thus necessarily draws our attention to the realm of the everyday as an extension and contestation of capitalist social relations of production. How capitalism survives and integrates space to produce the everyday through daily activities, stressing the homogenous, the repetitive, and segregation is therefore crucial. Yet the grid of urban space, across the street and the monument, can also be regarded as crucial places shaping the resistance to order in everyday life. Although reflective of repressive relations, or the seat of institutional power, monuments can equally be a site of collective redemption expressing an ethical and aesthetic power that can project a sense of alternative being, a differential space, an awareness of utopic space.Footnote 41 ‘Architecture oscillates’, states Lefebvre, ‘between monumental splendour and the cynicism of the “habit”’.Footnote 42 Part of the critique of everyday life, then, is about the exposure of modernity in order to reveal its pretention to newness, its concealment of regurgitation and aspects of everyday cultural repetition as part of the reproduction of the relations of production.Footnote 43 Equally, for Gramsci, the crucial issue (with reference to the contradictory forces within state–civil society relations, including intellectuals and political parties) was ‘how they react against “habitude” [consuetudine]’.Footnote 44 This necessitates a recognition and reconsideration of monumental projects at the level of habiting and a need to situate that lived space within the dialectic of both revolution and restoration as therefore crucial to rethinking a political economy of state space.
Attention now turns to the horizon of meanings that is condensed in the Monument to the Revolution and how the stories-so-far at this location of state space may be considered as part of a periodisation of everyday passive revolution.
Periodising the Stories-so-far of the Monument to the Revolution
The Porfiriato was marked by an admiration and appeal to foreign capital, with the Porfirian elite obsessed with the architecture, urbanism and philosophical ideas of specifically European modern influences. As Eric Hobsbawm details, across Europe there was the mass production of traditions from 1870 onwards, so that in France the ‘mania for putting up monuments’ was paralleled by the invented traditions of Germany exemplified by the avenue of victory leading to the Siegessäule (Victory Column) in Berlin, which witnessed the extraordinary Valhalla of Hohenzollern princes amidst an ‘accumulation of masonry and statuary’.Footnote 45 In France, ‘the opulent ensembles on the Place de la République and the Place de la Nation in Paris provided the ultimate version of such statuary’.Footnote 46 Hence, just as the French Third Republic embarked on a liberal tradition that was concentrated in symbolic institutionalisation, commemorative festivals, and monumentality, so too did the Porfiriato dictatorship. In 1892 the newspaper El Universal directly referred to the mania for assembling statues in Mexico that was reaching widespread proportions.Footnote 47
While Paris under Georges-Eugène Haussmann was shaped by a distinctive class project in which the state and financiers took the lead to transform a capital city shaped by bourgeois power into a city of capital, Mexico City was stamped with a similar model of modern urbanism.Footnote 48 There was a build-up of monuments on Paseo de la Reforma that included the placement of an equestrian statue of Carlos IV (1852); a Christopher Columbus statue (1876); the Monument to Cuauhtémoc (1887), dedicated to the last Aztec ruler of Tenochtitlán; and the Monument to Independence (1910), with its ‘Winged Victory’, itself evoking the Siegessäule in Berlin. This was the projection of the ‘ideal city’ under the Porfiriato, which Mauricio Tenorio-Trillo regarded as a ‘frontier expansion’ of cosmopolitan, modern, imitative, mimetic and aesthetic advancement.Footnote 49 For ‘foreign flâneurs’ writing around this time of the fin de siècle, like Charles Macomb Flandrau in Viva México!, places such as Paseo de la Reforma marked a liminal territory, torn between European-style architecture marked by mansard roofs and ‘detached dwellings that seek to superimpose Mexican characteristics’. For Flandrau, this noblest of avenues in Mexico City conveys an ‘uncompleted modernity’.Footnote 50 Alternative chroniclers, a little later in the 1940s, such as Salvador Novo, take us to other places such as the Monument of the Revolution or buildings such as the Lotería Nacional skyscraper then under construction, or the trinity of the Hotel Regis, Hotel Reforma and Hotel del Prado, and various skyscrapers that were all elbowing their way along new, sweeping arteries. As Novo comments, ‘Leaving behind the simple Monument to the Revolution … the insoluble problem of naming the streets of our city has surely arisen from the pathologically rampant [acromegálico] and unforeseeable way in which it has scattered itself while growing.’Footnote 51 According to Novo, the ‘new grandeur’ of Mexico is so much embedded within this process of blending that the country is seen as coming of age and taking its place among the cosmopolitan capitals of the world in the twentieth century. Novo sums up: ‘some of us [that] live in Mexico look back in regret on colonial times, others sigh for Díaz and others still take pride living in skyscrapers’.Footnote 52 Hence the importance of comprehending the particular within the project of modernism in Mexico – beyond the simple diffusion of Euro-American capitalism – to appreciate the ‘entangled modernities’ shaping global processes.Footnote 53
This grandeur of liminal space in Mexico City shaped during the antiguo régimen of the Porfiriato was, however, marked by foreign capital. Hence the ‘streets were paved, sewers were laid, and lights were installed by American, Canadian, German and English firms’.Footnote 54 The city's flagship commercial stores at the time (and since) included El Puerto de Liverpool (The Port of Liverpool), founded in 1888, and El Palacio de Hierro (The Iron Palace), founded in 1891. Both were established under the aegis of foreign capital linked to the Banco de Londres y México (Bank of London and Mexico) and the important holdings of the Banque de Paris et des Pays Bas (Bank of Paris and the Low Countries). A dominant class fraction known as the Barcelonnette Group had ties to José Yves Limantour, Finance Minister under Díaz, and would come to shape the forming of the Banco Nacional de México (Mexican National Bank) in 1884 to span manufacturing, commerce, finance and some landowning and mining interests in Mexico.Footnote 55 Hence, from the way in which streets spatially resembled Parisian boulevards, to the wave of monumentalism and statue construction, to the novelists and poets who translated European influences, to the flattening out of the urban landscape with the appearance of European and American styles all within the orbit of the dominance of foreign capital, Mexico experienced the move to modernism alongside the pressures of developmental catch-up. This was a liminal position that can be apprehended within a wider ‘anguish of backwardness’, referring to the situation caught between the modernist aspirations of emerging bourgeois society and the constraints and limits of uneven development.Footnote 56 Hence, for Marshall Berman, ‘the modernism of underdevelopment is forced to build on fantasies and dreams of modernity, to nourish itself on an intimacy and a struggle with mirages and ghosts’.Footnote 57 In Mauricio Tenorio-Trillo's inspired history of Mexico City at the turn of the twentieth century, this is grasped as the simultaneous and chaotic mixture of feelings, knowledges (vivencias, ‘lived moments’) and wonderings (ensimismamientos) that are produced by an urban walk, a building, a monument, a street, or a corner.Footnote 58 It is within this liminal space, betwixt and between, that Mexico experienced an exuberant form of modernism with an incomplete form of modernisation.Footnote 59 In this hybrid culture the Monument to the Revolution and the attrition of the utopia of revolution that it came to represent was born. Put differently, the contradictions of the Mexican Revolution became chiselled into its built environment to reveal its inner paradoxes in delivering an ‘incomplete modernity’, starting with the era of post-revolutionary state power.Footnote 60 Hence the turn to consider the following overlapping periodisation of the stories-so-far of the Monument to the Revolution to question how Mexican spatial and architectural expressions addressed the seemingly utopian call of revolution within a post-revolutionary period that presented the problem of ‘incomplete modernisation’.Footnote 61
State Power, 1933–68
The site of the Monument to the Revolution was originally proposed in 1897 as the Federal Legislative Palace. The design was initially awarded to an Italian architect, Pietro Paolo Quaglia, who died before construction commenced. The government then selected French architect Émile Bénard to design the building in neo-Classical style to deliver a double cupola structure at the centre (made of iron), with the building situated along an axial line linking Avenida Madero to Avenida Juárez from the National Palace to the proposed Legislative Palace, which was to resemble the United States Capitol.Footnote 62 Among the public works undertaken by the government from 1877 to 1910, the Legislative Palace was one of the highest in terms of total investment, amounting to some 10 per cent of the total outlay of MX$ 83.9 million that was exceeded only by public works for the distribution of drinking water and of the telegraph system throughout the Federal District, and by the construction of what would become the Palacio de Bellas Artes (Fine Arts Palace).Footnote 63 With the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution, the specific attempt of the Legislative Palace to project state space and reorganise the geography of state territory remained unfulfilled. Nevertheless, one recent revisionist assessment has attempted to recover the ‘inconclusive dream’ of Émile Bénard to argue that the ‘artist builder commemorates the essential foundations of independence and revolution to feed a reflection on the values, principles and virtues still in force on which this model of modernity rests’.Footnote 64
But it was not until the post-revolutionary period that the iron skeleton was to become part of the construction of a new articulation of state space. Initially it was suggested as early as 1925 that the old palace would become a ‘cathedral of work’ celebrating national and international worker productivism, still linked to the architect Émile Bénard.Footnote 65 ‘It was supposed to be a sort of Napoleonic grave for all the nation's heroes.’Footnote 66 The remnants of the Legislative Palace, it was proposed, would be used ‘under restrained economic conditions, in a complete architectural composition with monumentality and extraordinary commemorative force’.Footnote 67 Yet it was only in 1932 that the Mexican architect Carlos Obregón Santacilia appealed to the Minister of the Treasury, Alberto J. Pani, to end the demolition of the site and consider a commemorative initiative as a monument to La Revolución. As Thomas Benjamin explains, spaces of state power were sought at this time to legitimate the liberal and revolutionary past as part of the institutionalisation of the revolution and its conflictual fractions.Footnote 68 Of most interest here is a document written on 15 January 1933 to President Abelardo Rodríguez, from Alberto Pani and Plutarco Elías Calles (Jefe Máximo, or Chief Executive), that details how the new building should contrast with the ‘rich and lavish appearance’ but ‘detestable taste’ of the new Teatro Nacional (National Theatre) (or delayed Palacio de Bellas Artes). The latter was considered detestable because it was of ‘a pâpier maché [sic] architecture executed in Carrara marble’,Footnote 69 which heralds from Italy and also adorns the Benito Juárez Hemicycle (1911) and the statues of Miguel Hidalgo and other heroes at the base of the victory column of the Monument to Independence (1910).Footnote 70 The eventual recinto stone of the Monument of the Revolution – solidified lava known for its rustic appearance and porous finish common in the manufacture of molcajete (pestle and mortar) – could not be in more direct contrast. As Obregón Santacilia later noted, the monument would fuse Mexican themes with Art Déco motifs, in a style of ‘modern regionalism’ to become a ‘triumphal arch’ arising from the ruins of the antiguo régimen to perpetuate the social revolution that defeated it.Footnote 71 Indeed, Obregón Santacilia captured the Art Déco mode of composition in a series of major public buildings, monuments and private residences without jettisoning national symbolism.Footnote 72 ‘The Monument to the Revolution’, therefore, ‘acts as a “gateway”, an urban portal, and a pure space of transition’ between the condition of its immediate past and its attempt at revolutionary memorialisation.Footnote 73
Equally significant was the contracting of Oliverio Martínez, the sculptor known for his equestrian statue of Emiliano Zapata in Cuautla, to design four sculpture groups to be placed at each corner of the base of the monument's double dome. Thought to represent National Independence, Reform, the Redemption of the Peasant and the Redemption of the Worker, these sculptures further enforce a distinctly Mexican mode of composition blending the state ideology of mexicanidad with conceptions of modernism. The monument was intended to be paid for through national subscription; letters were sent in 1933 to state and territorial governors across the country via the Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público (Secretariat of Finance and Public Credit, SHCP) to create a commission for its funding.Footnote 74 This garnering of such local state patronage, at the inception of the Monument to the Revolution, was pivotal. It demonstrates the various geographical scales of statecraft, i.e. the multiscalar projection of state power across its internal scalar divisions (traversing central, metropolitan, regional, subnational and local territorial boundaries).Footnote 75 Funds were also received from the National Army, the Asociación de Bancos de México (Association of Mexican Banks, ABM) and state employees including from within the Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Obras Públicas (Secretariat of Communications and Public Works, SCOP) alongside smaller donations from workers and businesses.Footnote 76 There were still problems in financing the Monument to the Revolution, with debts amounting to MX$ 10,000 per month, paid through the Banco de México, and repeated controversies surrounding payments to contractors and the laying-off of workers linked to the monument.Footnote 77 With the funds created by the colecta (collection) covering only 10 per cent of the cost of construction, the remainder came from the Federal Government and the ruling Partido Nacional Revolucionario (National Revolutionary Party, PNR), precursor to the subsequent ruling Partido Revolucionario Institucional (Institutional Revolutionary Party, PRI).Footnote 78 Nevertheless the Monument to the Revolution was completed on 20 November 1938, Revolution Day, albeit without an official inauguration ceremony (see Figure 1). Commenting at the time on the spatiality of Mexico City, with its parallel streets and ‘elongated and lopsided’ arrangement on its mountain plateau, Graham Greene, another foreign flâneur, recognised how ‘Juárez is closed by the great Arch of the Republic.’Footnote 79 His contemporary, Evelyn Waugh, did not display such diffidence, and described the ‘formidable structure’ of the ‘triumphal arch’ of the Monument to the Revolution with its ‘startling ugliness’ as ‘certainly one of the most tediously hideous buildings in the New World’.Footnote 80
Since then the Plaza de la República has been the spatial site for official ceremonies and the Monument to the Revolution has witnessed the coalescence of annual sports festivals. ‘The twentieth of November commemorations evolved from low-key civic rituals into a grandiose state-sponsored spectacle.’Footnote 81 Beginning in 1942, by order of Congress, the ashes or mortal remains of revolutionary ‘heroes’ have been interned in the bases of the monument, with documents confirming that a contradictory and conflictual pantheon of heroes of the revolution be situated there.Footnote 82 Hence Venustiano Carranza (1942), Francisco I. Madero (1960), Plutarco Elías Calles (1969) and Lazaro Cárdenas (1970) have all been transferred to the pillars of the monument; and Francisco ‘Pancho’ Villa has been assumed to have joined them (1976).Footnote 83
Yet despite magisterial analysis of the manner of construction of the monument from the ruins of the old regime to the transformation of the revolution into government, how the monument transforms space is commented on only en passant in the extant literature.Footnote 84 This leaves further room for reflection on the role of the Monument to the Revolution in the organisation of space, the spatial logistics of state power, and the contradictions of space. Missing from wider commentaries is the recognition that state space too itself was and is bound to the site surrounding the monument at the Plaza de la República. This was so because the form of state at this time had not yet secured the formal appearance of the separation of the ‘purely economic’ mechanisms of the relations of production embedded in the market from the ‘purely political’ coercive aspects of state organisation. This means that there was still a partial fusion of economic and political powers whereby surplus extraction was bound up in an ‘extra-economic’ way with the state and its juridical and administrative functions. The direct ‘extra-economic’ – or purely political – pressures of overt coercion resting on juridical and political coercive instruments therefore remained necessary to compel the appropriation of surplus labour.Footnote 85 Hence, in an ‘extra-economic’, or purely political, sense the state was clearly present in this phase around the site of the Monument to the Revolution through the location of various agencies. These have included, directly opposite the monument, the location from 1947 until 1985 of the offices of the Dirección Federal de Seguridad (Federal Security Directorate, DFS) – the Mexican intelligence agency central to the prosecution of the ‘dirty war’ against left-wing guerrilla movements and students across the 1960s and 1970s – with direct ties to the Central Intelligence Agency in the United States. Also, various features and legacies of the Mexican corporatist state, reinforcing the spatiality of the site in a purely political sense, have included most prominently the offices of the Confederación de Trabajadores de México (Mexican Workers’ Confederation, CTM), present since 1936, celebrating its 80th anniversary in 2016. Also, in this era of state power, aspects of the developmental state were reproduced at this spatial site including the Instituto de Seguridad y Servicios Sociales de los Trabajadores del Estado (Institute for Social Security and Services for State Workers, ISSSTE), established in 1959, that administers health and social security systems to federal workers, as well as the offices of the Congreso del Trabajo (Workers’ Congress, CT) and the Banco Obrero (Workers’ Bank) that were both at one stage located around the Plaza de la República. For these reasons it can be argued that the Monument to the Revolution was constructed metaphorically and literally within the shadow of the state (see Figure 2). Along with Octavio Paz it is possible to state that, at the end of this period, both ‘Moscow and Mexico City are full of gagged people and monuments to the Revolution.’Footnote 86 The spatial dimension is therefore realised when viewing how the site of the Monument to the Revolution was intrinsic to the extension of the state mode of production where ‘the state becomes more clearly the agent, even the guiding hand, of this production’ of space.Footnote 87 Yet, although the monument may have served as a place of pilgrimage and the legitimation of state power under conditions of passive revolution, it has also been perceived anew through the lens of protest and confrontation, by proponents of both reform and revolution, becoming a fulcrum for the rebuke of state power.Footnote 88 The significance therefore emerges of considering the Monument to the Revolution not just as a space of state control but also as a fractured space of difference representing an antagonistic and ruinous tendency for the capitalist state.
State Crisis, 1968–80s
So far, it has been argued that there is a plural temporal dimension to space, that space is a simultaneity of stories or wonderings (Tenorio-Trillo's ‘ensimismamientos’), which enables recognition of several overlapping periods shaping the spatial history of the Monument to the Revolution. Space can never be closed. It is a sphere of multiplicity in which ongoing social relations are constantly under construction as they draw together different trajectories. Moments of crisis and violent suppression of workers’ and students’ struggle existed in earlier periods – including those of the railway workers and students (1958–9), teachers and oil workers (1960) and telephone operators (1962) – but it was the subsequent student movement and labour struggles that marked a new sequence of spatial contradictions at the Monument to the Revolution.Footnote 89 The general background here includes the massacre of some 300 students on 2 October 1968 at the Plaza de las Tres Culturas in Tlatelolco alongside the renewed insurgencia obrera (labour insurgency) and disaffection among the middle classes with import substitution industrialisation (ISI) in the 1970s. These struggles unfolded in a wider context of urban and rural guerrilla movements in the same decade that was also stained by the Corpus Christi massacre, on 10 June 1971: following a march by 10,000 students to the Monument to the Revolution, an estimated 150 were killed and ‘disappeared’ as a result of the actions taken by Los Halcones (‘The Falcons’), a paramilitary black (covert) operations group trained by the DFS.Footnote 90 These social movements further underline how struggles over state space and the right to the production of space impacted on the site of the Monument to the Revolution under conditions of everyday passive revolution.
The counter-spaces designed to thwart state strategies of hierarchy and contest the ruling-class hold on the hegemony of abstract space snowballed in the wake of the student movement. Paco Ignacio Taibo II writes that the student movement ‘dwelled in a smaller city within a vast metropolis’: to the east their enclave's border was marked by the statue of General Zaragoza (now Zaragoza metro station); to the north, on Avenida Insurgentes, by the statues of Indios Verdes (also on the metro); to the west the former H. Steele y Compañía factory in Polanco indicating the border of the ‘industrial’ section; and to the south the laboratories of Tlalpan that signalled the extremities of the known city.Footnote 91 Within this territory, the students were masters of Del Valle and Navarte, San Rafael and Santa María, Condesa and Roma. ‘To us reform and revolution’, argues Paco Ignacio Taibo II, ‘were just avenues. All other neighbourhoods were foreign to us: places you might pass through, but where you never lingered.’Footnote 92 The student mobilisation gave birth to Vietnam solidarity demonstrations and brigadismo (in which mobile action groups would hold flash rallies anywhere in the city), as well as the occupation of schools and the creation of libertarian common spaces based on gatherings. In 1975 a protest led by students, members of the Partido Comunista Mexicano (Mexican Communist Party, PCM), and the Taller de Gráfica Popular (People's Graphic Workshop, TGP) against the dictatorship of General Franco in Spain was held at the Monument to the Revolution following the assassination of activist members of Euskadi ta Askatasuna (Basque Homeland and Freedom, ETA). The protesters can be seen hanging banners under the plaque that is an architectural tribute at the monument to Carlos Obregón Santacilia.Footnote 93
Meanwhile important groups in the independent labour movement started to form in the 1970s, with democratising mobilisations including the Tendencia Democrática (Democratic Tendency, TD), a dissident movement within the Sindicato Unico de Trabajadores Electricistas de la República Mexicana (United Syndicate of Electrical Workers of the Mexican Republic, SUTERM). Led by Rafael Galván, this dissident movement of electrical workers organised key protests, meetings and rallies at the Monument to the Revolution across 1975 and 1976. Allied with the student movement, the TD was subjected to police repression, with strikebreakers and agitators deployed at their protests, resulting in arrests, injuries and deaths. ‘The percentage of all democratic labour conflicts involving physical violence increased from 14.3 per cent in 1970 to 22.9 per cent in 1976, peaking in 1977.’Footnote 94 The archives reveal that a demonstration numbering approximately 150,000 at the Monument to the Revolution on 20 March 1976 led by the TD, but with links to students, academic staff and members of the SUTERM across the states of Mexico, was monitored by Los Halcones alongside some 27,000 policemen.Footnote 95 State power here was supported by 15 riot trucks and 25 army tanks in order to combat opponents of the regime who were using the mythic image of the Monument to the Revolution and its symbolism against the state itself.Footnote 96 Newspapers at the time propagated the untruth that protesters would be armed, in order to legitimise the potential for armed conflict, while the DFS took photographs of the event whilst reporting on the speeches and monitoring the procession through to the Zócalo.Footnote 97 Although the struggle was defeated, leading to the virtual elimination of the electrical workers’ mobilisation within the TD, protests continued at the monument (Figure 3). These included the anniversary student protest of 1977 against the earlier 1971 Corpus Christi Massacre, protests by the Sindicato Mexicano de Electricistas (Mexican Electricians’ Syndicate, SME) against attacks on the union's rights to freedom of association (1978), further protests by students and parties of the left in solidarity with Vietnam demonstrations (1979), and a march by members of the Sindicato Unitario Nacional de Trabajadores Universitarios (National United Syndicate of University Workers, SUNTU), the Frente Auténtico del Trabajo (Workers’ Authentic Front, FAT) and elements of the Fourth International to announce a university strike (1980).Footnote 98
Taken as a whole, this era displays the site of the monument as essentially a void that is contested by the logic of repressive space where the remains of the revolution are buried. But it also demands or calls forth a concrete space of habiting organised around an alternative set of spatial practices that are neglected, namely the explosion of new spaces of difference in the struggle for the right to space. As Lefebvre reminds us:
An existing space may outlive its original purpose and the raison d’être which determines its forms, functions, and structures; it may thus in a sense become vacant, and susceptible of being diverted, reappropriated and put to a use quite different from its initial one.Footnote 99
As a social space, then, the Plaza de la República was at the centre of this struggle over state space. This struggle was not settled. This is because, ‘rather than resolving the contradictions of space, state action makes them worse’.Footnote 100 The struggle for a different space became repressed but not suppressed. By the 1980s, the labour insurgency merged into a new tendency with the formation of the Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (National Coordinating Committee of Teachers in Education, CNTE), an active teachers’ opposition movement located in Chiapas, Oaxaca and Guerrero, while the ’68 student movement remained latent, another ever-vigilant element of popular resistance. Nevertheless, the empty spaces of the Monument to the Revolution that were meant to signify the promises of the revolution became increasingly abandoned from the 1980s onwards. Octavio Paz notes that architecture is a society's ‘incorruptible witness’ and in edifices such as the Monument to the Revolution in the twentieth century there was represented the vulgar and heavy architecture of state megalomania, the production of a cement giant, that came to represent the revolution that had defeated itself.Footnote 101 As one commentary on the Monument to the Revolution speculates, the original architect Carlos Obregón Santacilia would no doubt have complained about the state of neglect into which the site had fallen by the 1980s, including the poor lighting, the cables and ropes just left hanging from lamps, and the low quality of superimposed government images on the building façades. Yet, continuing with Víctor Jiménez's observations, the monument was destined to last, not least because Obregón Santacilia was careful for it to be so:
the rhetoric that served for decades to legitimise the discourse of the Revolution and many governments could be abandoned. But the stone is a huge reminder of the significance of this monument … [that is] here to stay for a long time.Footnote 102
The plurality of meanings expressed by the Monument to the Revolution thus far took on a new basis in the period up to the present. A pertinent sub-question in this third era – when space is no longer solely the site of repression – therefore becomes: ‘Where then is the architecture of enjoyment?’Footnote 103
State Rollback, 1980s to the Present
By the 1980s the Plaza de la República and the Monument to the Revolution increasingly looked like a forlorn space, occupied by elements of the purely political state, a status that continued into the 1990s with the unfolding of neoliberalisation. Here neoliberalisation refers to an accumulation strategy and attempted hegemonic project to further the continuance of the capital relation and secure the state as a social form in its apparent separation from the economy. As Bob Jessop highlights, ‘the crucial factor in the success of accumulation strategies remains the integration of the circuit of capital and hence the consolidation of support within the dominant fractions and classes’, that is, class struggle over hegemony.Footnote 104 In Mexico, the conflicts of interest that eventually culminated in such neoliberalisation – reflected especially in the presidency of Carlos Salinas de Gortari (1988–94) – were pursued while attempting to reconfigure a renewed hegemonic project of the then ruling PRI.Footnote 105 The state creates the conditions for the structural power of capital under neoliberalisation through the rollout of market-oriented disciplinary processes involving regulatory priorities favouring the interests of capital. The process of rollback, then, refers to the initial onset of neoliberalisation, when restructuring projects are focused on dismantling specific institutions in the name of deregulation and democratisation while attacking labour unions, planning agencies, entitlement systems and public bureaucracies through funding cuts, the downsizing of organisations and privatisation. Yet it should be clear that neoliberalisation processes of market-oriented reform are also a form of re-regulatory restructuring to secure the rule of capital.Footnote 106 Mexico's neoliberalisation involved a policy paradigm shift from the developmentalism of ISI to the implementation of fiscal and monetary austerity associated with structural adjustment and a set of institutional reforms to the state initiated through the mid-1980s onwards.Footnote 107 The result was a struggle-driven process that nevertheless secured a capitalist type of state dominated by the logic of accumulation so that the form of the modern state came to be increasingly distinguished by its apparent institutional separation from the economy. As Ellen Meiksins Wood clarifies, in such circumstances this differentiation means that the powers of surplus appropriation and distribution do not rest on ‘purely political’ forms of extra-economic coercion.Footnote 108 Instead, the coercive power of capitalist exploitation is conducted through consolidation of private property and mediated by conditions of market compulsion. In such instances, the contractual relation between formally ‘free’ producers (who have only their labour power to sell) and appropriators (who control the means of production) are subjected to conditions of ‘purely economic’ exchange. Neoliberalisation can therefore be understood as a struggle-driven process to consolidate the appearance of the separation of the economic (private) sphere and the political (public) sphere of the state in capitalism.
The new consolidation of the basis of state power under neoliberalisation in Mexico has had profound consequences for the social function of the Monument to the Revolution following the recent renovations. The social relations of production of neoliberalisation have been projected onto the space of the monument, becoming inscribed there, to reproduce that space itself in new circumstances. Although the commodification of the monument had been present in earlier periods (witness souvenir postcards available from the 1930s onwards, the four-centavo stamp from 1934, or the MX$ 200 old peso coin from 1985 that was matched by the MX$ 100 new peso banknote in 2010), the hundred-year anniversary initiated a step change in the deployment of state power in controlling space through new forms of surplus value transfers. In the multiplicity of overlapping trajectories marking the periodisation of the monument, it is the era of neoliberalisation that unlocks the massification of the Monument to the Revolution. Here the role of monopoly rent in providing a spatial fix for capital accumulation comes to the fore in terms of extracting surpluses from local differences and aesthetic meanings that have become commodified. As Lefebvre recognises, programmed consumption is intrinsic to the political economy of space and the reproduction of the social relations of production in everyday life.Footnote 109 Monopoly rent comes to the fore for at least two reasons: (1) because of the way the state controls a specific resource, commodity, or location in relation to a certain kind of activity, which enables the extraction of monopoly rents from those desiring to use it; and (2) when the land, resource, or asset and its proximate surroundings are directly traded upon so that scarcity can be created by withholding land, creating monopoly rent out of uniqueness.Footnote 110 David Harvey therefore argues that:
the knowledge and heritage industries, the vitality and ferment of cultural production, signature architecture and the cultivation of aesthetic judgements have become powerful constitutive elements in the politics of urban entrepreneurialism.Footnote 111
It is still the case that, as part of the sports festival on Revolution Day (20 November), with activities organised under the aegis of the Instituto del Deporte del Distrito Federal (Federal District Sports Institute, IDDF), anything from squash to taekwondo, badminton, tennis, table-tennis, wrestling, football, netball, gymnastics or basketball can be played for free at the Plaza de la República. Yet it is now matched by the commodification of the Monument to the Revolution through a private concession granted to Grupo MYT as a consequence of the renovation. As the Assistant Director of the National Museum of the Revolution has revealed, the explicit plan of the renovation was to create a tourist corridor from Avenida Juárez to Avenida Reforma and the centro histórico (historic centre) in an attempt to reactivate the political economy of Colonia Tabacalera, which surrounds the site.
From the space of the monument as ‘a plaza of the PRI’, the concession to Grupo MYT in administering tourist access to the Monument to the Revolution has resulted in the site becoming a ‘Holy Land of Jerusalem’ of competing vested interests.Footnote 112 While the Secretaría de Cultura (Culture Secretariat) of the City of Mexico is responsible for the Museum of the Revolution, Grupo MYT administers the Monument to the Revolution from the gift shop to the café to the observation deck and has launched an array of representational spatial products from monument mugs to 3D puzzles and more that are now readily available in the gift store where previously there was no such outlet.Footnote 113
In Mexico the minimum wage is officially MX$ 70 a day (or US$ 4) with 6.5 million workers or 13 per cent of the workforce believed to be earning this figure.Footnote 114 However, Mexico's hourly wages are about a fifth lower than China's, and the percentage of the labour force that does not receive any income, or receives only twice the minimum wage, was estimated at about 65 per cent in 2009.Footnote 115 It would require then at least a week's salary to pay for a sunrise breakfast visit at the Monument to the Revolution (MX$ 300); or a t-shirt (MX$ 195), with a female-only size announcing across the chest ‘Arriba la revolución’ (‘Up with the revolution’); or a general admission ticket to the 360° observation deck, the panoramic elevator and summit, and the foundation gallery (MX$ 110).Footnote 116
This is in stark contrast to the control over the Museum, exercised by the Secretaría de Desarrollo Urbano y Vivienda (Secretariat of Urban Development and Housing, SEDUVI) – a further public space authority – that has kept the fee for public access to the Museum at a far more affordable MX$ 28, which attracts 350,000 visitors per annum and over 6,000 visitors on a Sunday (when entrance is free). As Miguel Ángel Berumen Campos, the former Director of the National Museum of the Revolution, has confirmed, ‘the Monument is ruled by private concession’, revealing a tense standoff between the Museum and the Monument authorities.Footnote 117 Despite the Museum also providing a crucial social function through its control over the Galería de Arte Contemporáneo (Contemporary Art Gallery) and free music evenings through the Tabacalera Jazz Club at the base of the site, this is dwarfed by events held at the Monument to the Revolution. The latter include the ‘bread and circus’ attractions held in recent years such as free concerts at the monument, with the appearance of Britney Spears in December 2011 attracting some 50,000 people to start the seasonal celebrations, or the Festival Internacional de las Luces de México (Mexican International Festival of Light, FILUX), featuring the monument (10–13 November 2016). But equally it would include events such as rallies at the site of the monument organised by the Secretaría de Desarrollo Económico (Secretariat of Economic Development, SEDECO) precisely to promote, since 2015, registrations for its Programa de Fortalecimiento a los Micronegocios (Programme of Strengthening Small Businesses), which is aimed at enforcing greater market discipline and extending credit to the wider population (through ‘debtfarism’, i.e. lending to social groups who are usually excluded from it).Footnote 118 Also, many of the everyday visitors to the Plaza de la República – who came to enjoy the water fountains, walk the dog, relax on a break from work, skip school, skateboard, play football, dance, fly a drone, or hang around on a date – confirmed that they had not been to the Museum.Footnote 119
Surrounded by the offices of Banamex and Teletech, the still crumbling El Frontón building, and new convenience store outlets such as Oxxo, 7 Eleven, and the Don Porfirio Caffé [sic], members of Sección XXII of the CNTE, active in their occupation of the Plaza de la República to contest education reforms, confirmed the ‘class divisions’ that dissect the surrounding site. On one side of the Plaza, locations to eat or use basic facilities (toilets, laundrettes) would be affordable – in Tabacalera around the streets of Edison and Mariscal close to the Revolución metro station. On the opposite side of the Plaza, towards Avenida Reforma, restaurant meals would be in excess of MX$ 100 (compared to MX$ 40 and less towards the metro), indicating how space is divided.Footnote 120 Meanwhile, developments such as the completion in 2014 of the remodelling of the Revolución metro station at a cost of some MX$ 74 million, alongside the existence of new offices like the Instituto del Fondo Nacional para el Consumo de los Trabajadores (Institute of the National Fund for Workers’ Consumption, INFONACOT) – a government entity that grants debtfare to affiliated employees – adjacent to the CTM headquarters, all give presence to the ongoing neoliberal transformation of space at the Plaza de la República (see Figure 4).
Yet it would be mistaken to assume that these past and present forms of spatial control are somehow lost on the collective consciences of everyday life in constructing and contesting the spatiality of the Monument to the Revolution. We can agree with Lefebvre when he writes, ‘today more than ever, the class struggle is inscribed in space’.Footnote 121 For just as capital in movement has attempted to destroy the uniqueness of the centro histórico of Mexico City and its neighbouring locales, differential space has also been reasserted to contest its smooth functioning. In immediate everydayness, the Plaza de la República has been reclaimed as a social space of leisure through the renovation of the water fountains at the base of the monument. Hijacking its original monumentality and altering space, the result of such enjoyment has been a thorough appropriating and repurposing – or détournement – of the architecture.Footnote 122 Youthful expressions of enjoyment and frivolity have returned to the site – a temporary Ferris wheel was once located at the monument, as depicted in the 1966 photograph by Hector García entitled ‘Rueda de la Fortuna’Footnote 123 – with adolescents chasing each other through the fountains and hawkers selling street toys as passers-by look on.Footnote 124 Yet it is within these same spaces that oppositional movements have also still formed to undermine the forces of capital and provide moments of rupture by asserting the collective power of bodies in public space. The latter have included the mobilisation of trade unionists and campesinos at the Monument to the Revolution, in support of the 44,000 sacked workers of the SME who struggled against the closure of the state-owned Compañía Luz y Fuerza del Centro (Central Light and Power Company), since October 2009.Footnote 125 Also, there has been the response of the #YoSoy132 student movement that gathered apace during the 2012 election to protest against Enrique Peña Nieto and wider issues of media manipulation surrounding the presidential election. An annual ‘Lesbian March’ in support of respect for women's human rights, ending at the monument on Plaza de la República, organised by the Comité Organizador de la Marcha Lésbica (Coordinating Committee of Lesbian Marchers, COMAL) and 22 other feminist groups is an alternative example of lived space and reveals another different claim on the right to the city, i.e. that not to be excluded from its centrality and movement.Footnote 126 The largely unsolved murder and disappearance of 43 students from a teachers’ college in Ayotzinapa, in the southern state of Guerrero, in September 2014, has sparked rallies at the Monument to the Revolution, while angry gasolinazo protests in January 2017, over the 20 per cent hike in state-set fuel prices, have also been held at the site. The plantón (encampment) of teachers from Sección XXII of the CNTE, since 2013, also persisted at the base of the Monument to the Revolution, despite state pressure for the teachers to clean up the site and move on. These teachers, many from Oaxaca, Chiapas and Guerrero, were protesting against the state's education reform proposals to introduce market forces into the hiring and promotion of teachers, and the provision of basic services to schools.Footnote 127 In response to a question as to how long the plantón might remain in the Plaza, even in reduced form, one Oaxacan representative from the CNTE stated ‘in order to defend our rights it could take a lifetime; that is the only limit’.Footnote 128 Whether it be the resurrection in part of the student movement, or the militant return of independent trade unionism linked to the CNTE after its displacement from the 1970s following the SUTERM demonstrations, or the presence of petroleum protests, the ghosts of the past have contested the everydayness of new state space at the Monument to the Revolution. How these struggles over spaces of difference can move from organising in and dominating place to commanding space remains a key challenge for social movements aiming to articulate another space.Footnote 129
Conclusion: The Monument to Passive Revolution
In his classic exposition, Le Corbusier provocatively exclaimed: ‘Architecture or Revolution. Revolution can be avoided.’Footnote 130 Mexico avoided neither. It experienced what has been termed a sinuous Latin American modernity, marked by an unevenness of development, a hybrid culture, containing the utopian promises of revolution and the failures of an exuberant modernism.Footnote 131 These multiple logics mean that modernity in Mexico and Latin America more generally was not a simple transplant of or diffusion from Euro-American influences. There is a specific liminal profile to the processes of ‘modernism without modernity’ in Latin America, linked to the upheavals of revolution and counter-revolution and the mimetic combination of foreign trends with more vernacular adaptation into the everydayness of local particularities. In terms of monumentalism, this was marked as much along Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City, as along Avenida Central in Rio de Janeiro, in Praça dos Três Poderes in Brasília, or along Avenida de Mayo in Buenos Aires.Footnote 132 As Henri Lefebvre states, ‘inasmuch as global space bears the inscriptions and prescriptions of power, its effectiveness redounds upon … the levels of the architectural (monument/building) and the urban’.Footnote 133
My aim in this article has been to examine the horizon of meanings that have surrounded the contemporary history and modernism of the Monument to the Revolution in order to reveal an overlapping periodisation of the social functions that the Plaza de la República has had in the past and continues to perform in the present. In so doing, I have argued that an understanding of the multiplicity of meanings projected by a periodisation of the Monument to the Revolution ‘inculcates the habit of assessing the forces of agency in society with greater caution and precision’, as Gramsci advises.Footnote 134 Such an overlapping periodisation assists in the endeavour to avoid a flattened or undifferentiated spatial and temporal perspective on the monument's significance, or despatialised presentation.
On the ‘world-historical necromancy’ of representing the past in the present of bourgeois society, Karl Marx noted that ‘the resurrection of the dead in those revolutions served the purposes of glorifying the new struggles; not of parodying the old’.Footnote 135 But in Mexico there has been a unique configuration of both glorifying the new struggles stemming from the revolution and parodying the old. This has unfolded by conjuring up the spirits of the past to service the present so that the dead generations do weigh on the brains of the living, sometimes with nightmarish remembrances. In the choice between architecture and revolution, revolution cannot be avoided. The contradiction between revolution and restoration has been presented here as a defining characteristic of the condition of passive revolution, referring to how processes of revolutionary rupture become displaced, thwarted, domesticated and averted, leading to a continuation of the previous political order of capital. The crucial point of the analysis is that the condition of passive revolution captures both elements of ‘revolt’ and ‘revival’ to ‘express the concept of a return to a condition that had already existed before’.Footnote 136
My argument has been that the Monument to the Revolution is a unique spatial site offering a material symbolisation of the dialectical tensions of the Mexican Revolution. It carries the social pathologies induced by the collective forces of revolution alongside the modernism induced by the post-revolutionary state mode of production. As Henri Lefebvre questions, though, with pertinence to the Monument to the Revolution: ‘Would such a project, with its post-revolutionary appearance and intent, be counterrevolutionary when expressed in a pre-revolutionary manner?’Footnote 137 My focus has been on the specific spatial practices, the form of the codifications of architecture, that have contributed to the construction and reproduction of the modern state through the site of the Monument to the Revolution in conditions of passive revolution. In terms of the synthesis of revolution and restoration, then, ‘el Monumento a la Revolución’ is best understood as ‘el monumento a la revolución pasiva’ in Mexico. The slogan ‘To the Revolution, of yesterday, of today, of tomorrow, of always’ was originally intended for inclusion at the site of the Monument to the Revolution in the 1930s.Footnote 138 However, with no loss of irony, it would become embossed on glass panels surrounding the restored observation deck following the completion of the centenary renovations in 2010 by the private company Grupo MYT. The Monument to the Revolution therefore represents a congealed form of the Mexican Revolution, chiselled into the legacy of its built environment, to retain both the old Porfirian structure and a form of monumentalisation flowing from the revolution as an expression of Mexico's incomplete entrance into an entangled modernity. Additionally, as argued, the spatial and historical consolidation of the Monument to the Revolution is embedded in the transition from the purely political ‘extra-economic’ pressure, or overt coercive presence, of the state to the consolidation of the ‘purely economic’ rise of the powers of market compulsion in capitalism, which is still of course backed by the coercive armour of the state. Within that transition is the rise to prominence of the site of the Monument to the Revolution as a place for the realisation of monopoly rent within the logic of capital accumulation, or how surpluses can be extracted from its history, heritage and aesthetic meaning through commodification. The commodification of the monument within the context of neoliberalisation is thus the latest manifestation of this transition. As Marx states in his account of the circulation of commodities as exchange-value: ‘Not even are the bones of saints and still less are more delicate res sacrosanctæ, extra commercium hominum able to withstand this alchemy’.Footnote 139 Yet, at the same time, the Monument to the Revolution is a profoundly ambiguous carrier of utopian promise, even today. How the present generation communicates with the redemptive hopes of past generations in shaping the future is still a key vector forming the struggles over differential space in, around, and beyond the Plaza de la República. In accord with García Canclini, then:
We must rejoice that the city is not merely a pristine continuation of tidy spaces where historical landmarks are quietly integrated into contemporary life but, rather, a living organism capable of merging its past and present struggles.Footnote 140
The significance of the Monument to the Revolution then, in terms of the ‘habiting’ of everyday passive revolution, may still turn on the effective participation of the present generation in shaping the utopian desires from past generations, as future struggles may attest.