This weeks material focused on crisis facing Latin America at the beginning of the 20th century, with a particular focus on Mexico and the Mexican Revolution. The Mexican revolution is really interesting to me because it seems to still play a role in Mexican politics and society. As Dawson mentions in the video the Plan […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 8 | Tagged with EZLN, Mexico, NAFTA, pancho villa, Plan de Ayala, revolution, Zapata
One thing I found particularly interesting that came up in Dawson, as well as Emilio Zapata’s “Plan de Ayala”, was the association of peasant revolutionaries as being ‘bandits and rebels’. Dawson points out that the writing was essentially on the wall after Zapata and Villa occupied Mexico City; that they had irreversibly upset the liberal […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 8 | Tagged with MLK, oligarchy, revolution, riot, unionism, Villa, Zapata
This weeks video made me think of the famous line from The Dark Knight: “You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.” While certainly not from the world’s most profound movie, the line seems to resonate with some of the revolutionary themes mentioned by Professor Dawson. The lasting […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 8 | Tagged with Emiliano Zapata, Mexico, Poncho Villa, revolution
What I found interesting about this week’s material was Dawson’s notion of revolution being a claim of ownership on history. In most situations, people discuss revolution in relation to specific themes such as discontent of a governmental regime or economic inequality, the concept of revolution being an attempt to generate societal change with the intent […]
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With the turn of the twentieth century in Mexico, social forces that had long been oppressed by Porfirio Diaz’s regime saw in his promise for fair elections in 1910, an opportunity to act. What becomes clear, however, is that those emerging social movements are not as homogenous, hierarchically organized nor as experienced in governance as the existing regime. Though these various actors in the Mexican Revolution could agree that something should change, what, and how things should change was far from consensus. Does an increasing political consciousness among peasant and…read more
Posted in Blogs, Week 8 | Tagged with Bolshevik Revolution, globalization, governance, heterogeneity, homogeneity, International socialism, Jose Vasconselo, Mexican Revolution, peasant class, pluralism, Porfirio Díaz, revolution, Rubén Darío, semana tragica, twentieth century, USA Imperialism, Working class
This week took into consideration the different results that modernization and the export boom brought about. It was interesting to think about the different reasons behind a revolutionary movement and who decides to call a movement “successful”. More importantly, and Dawson makes the point, the revolutions, or social/economic/political movements in Latin America did not distribute […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 8 | Tagged with Mexico, revolution
This week took into consideration the different results that modernization and the export boom brought about. It was interesting to think about the different reasons behind a revolutionary movement and who decides to call a movement “successful”. More importantly, and Dawson makes the point, the revolutions, or social/economic/political movements in Latin America did not distribute […]
Posted in Blogs, Week 8 | Tagged with Mexico, revolution
“The revolution eats its young.” Before watching the interview for this week, this was a phrase I had never encountered. I was always taught that revolutions are often necessary, as they result from trying times. I was always taught that revolutions require sacrifice and effort, both of which will be rewarded upon the (eventual) dawn… Continue reading Revolution →
Posted in Blogs, Week 8 | Tagged with martyr, martyrdom, Mexican Revolution, revolution, Villa