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9781496246226 Academic Inspection Copy

Rebellious Citizens

Social Upheaval and Democracy in Revolutionary Mexico
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In Rebellious Citizens Ulices Pina shows that democracy in Mexico has never been the exclusive domain of elites, nor confined to the ballot box. Focusing on the aftermath of the Mexican Revolution of 1910-20, Pina explores how citizens forged a substantive democratic culture in the crucible of three successive social upheavals that shook the established social order in the central western state of Jalisco during the 1920s and 1930s--a formative period in the nation's political history. Pina examines how ordinary Mexicans actively shaped the political process, made their own history, and fought for equality in the country's long fight for democracy. The long-term effects of the recurring uprisings in Jalisco were central to the new political system produced by the postrevolutionary state: After each rebellion, authorities consolidated institutional power, elected officials debated the strictures of government, and ordinary people grappled with the promise and limits of political emancipation. Because of the contradictions that arose from the creation of this modern political system, especially those that emerged at the nexus of democratic inclusion and authoritarian rule, seemingly powerless populations claimed equality, exercised participation rights, and demanded respect, even amid the violence and surveillance the state deployed against marginal groups to achieve its goals. Rebellious Citizens brings into focus the struggles of ordinary people to experiment with new ways of doing politics to remake the nation.
Ulices Pina is an associate professor of history at California State University, Long Beach.
"Rebellious Citizens takes an original approach to unpacking the origins of Mexico's modern political history. . . . I especially appreciate how Ulices Pina establishes a through-line between how policies were discussed in the halls of government, such as around the conflict over anticlericalism and the implementation of socialist education, to the communities reacting to these debates and changes. The reader comes away with the impression that making politics--and especially making democratic and civic-minded politics--can be a prolonged messy affair. . . . Pina is a master storyteller throughout."--Gladys I. McCormick, author of The Logic of Compromise: Authoritarianism, Betrayal, and Revolution in Rural Mexico, 1935-1965
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