contributions by authordel valle pav´on, guillermina, ‘‘comercializaci ´on de cacao de...

33
Contributions by Author Acevedo, Emily, ‘‘State Building and Development: How Mexico’s Past Still Matters to its Present,’’ 29, no. 2:503–521. Alexander, Anna Rose, ‘‘Incendiary Legislation: Fire Risk and Protec- tion in Porfirian Puebla,’’ 29, no. 1:175–199. Alexander, Ryan M., ‘‘Backwater Bureaucrat to Revolutionary Myth- Maker: Bernardo M. de Le´ on, Caciquismo, and Memory in Nayar- it, 1920–1990,’’ 27, no. 1: 73–95. Ali, Shara, ‘‘Yucatecan-Mexican Relations and Yucatecan Politicking from 1829–1832: Centralism, Secession, and Federalism,’’ 30, no. 2:313–341. Andrews, Catherine, ‘‘Los primeros proyectos constitucionales en exico y su influencia brit´ anica (1821–1836),’’ 27, no. 1:5–43. Archer, Christon I., ‘‘Royalist Scourge or Liberator of the Patria? Agust´ ın de Iturbide and Mexico’s War of Independence, 1810–1821’’ 24, no. 2:325–362. Arias Herrera, Juan Carlos, ‘‘From the Screen to the Wall: Siqueiros and Eisenstein in Mexico,’’ 30, no. 2:421–445. Arnson, Cynthia J., Ra´ ul Ben´ ıtez Manaut, and Andrew Selee, ‘‘Frozen Negotiations: The Peace Process in Chiapas,’’ 22, no. 1:131–151. Arredondo, Isabel, ‘‘From Travelogues to Political Intervention in Juliet Barrett Rublee’s Flame of Mexico,’’ 26, no. 1:79–93. Avella Alaminos, Isabel, ‘‘Las primeras operaciones del Export-Import Bank en M´ exico, 1935–1942,’’ 28, no. 1:133–162. A ´ vila, Alfredo, ‘‘Catholic Nations: Spain and Spanish America in the Early Nineteenth Century,’’ 30, no. 2:589–601. Bailey, John, and Pablo Paras, ‘‘Perceptions and Attitudes about Cor- ruption and Democracy in Mexico,’’ 22, no. 1: 57–81. Banwell, Julia, ‘‘Death and Disruption in the Photography of the Decena Tr´ agica,’’ 30, no. 1:104–121. Bartolucci, Jorge, ‘‘Developing Science in Developing Countries: The Harvard College Observatory and the Establishment of Modern Astrophysics in Mexico,’’ 21, no. 1:33–58. Ben´ ıtez Manaut, Ra´ ul, Andrew Selee, and Cynthia J. Arnson, ‘‘Frozen Negotiations: The Peace Process in Chiapas,’’ 22, no. 1:131–151. Blancas Neria, Andr´ es, y Carlos L´ opez–G´ omez, ‘‘Integraci´ on Tec- nol´ ogica y Financiera de Pequen ˜as y Medianas Empresas: Hacia una Nueva Pol´ ıtica de Industrializaci´ on en M´ exico,’’ 30, no. 2:522–556. Boldy, Steven, ‘‘De la afrenta al melodrama: la familia, la violencia y el crimen en las ´ ultimas obras de Carlos Fuentes,’’ 28, no. 2:243–264. 649

Upload: others

Post on 18-Apr-2020

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Contributions by Author

Acevedo, Emily, ‘‘State Building and Development: How Mexico’sPast Still Matters to its Present,’’ 29, no. 2:503–521.

Alexander, Anna Rose, ‘‘Incendiary Legislation: Fire Risk and Protec-tion in Porfirian Puebla,’’ 29, no. 1:175–199.

Alexander, Ryan M., ‘‘Backwater Bureaucrat to Revolutionary Myth-Maker: Bernardo M. de Leon, Caciquismo, and Memory in Nayar-it, 1920–1990,’’ 27, no. 1: 73–95.

Ali, Shara, ‘‘Yucatecan-Mexican Relations and Yucatecan Politickingfrom 1829–1832: Centralism, Secession, and Federalism,’’ 30, no.2:313–341.

Andrews, Catherine, ‘‘Los primeros proyectos constitucionales enMexico y su influencia britanica (1821–1836),’’ 27, no. 1:5–43.

Archer, Christon I., ‘‘Royalist Scourge or Liberator of the Patria? Agustınde Iturbide and Mexico’s War of Independence, 1810–1821’’ 24,no. 2:325–362.

Arias Herrera, Juan Carlos, ‘‘From the Screen to the Wall: Siqueirosand Eisenstein in Mexico,’’ 30, no. 2:421–445.

Arnson, Cynthia J., Raul Benıtez Manaut, and Andrew Selee, ‘‘FrozenNegotiations: The Peace Process in Chiapas,’’ 22, no. 1:131–151.

Arredondo, Isabel, ‘‘From Travelogues to Political Intervention inJuliet Barrett Rublee’s Flame of Mexico,’’ 26, no. 1:79–93.

Avella Alaminos, Isabel, ‘‘Las primeras operaciones del Export-ImportBank en Mexico, 1935–1942,’’ 28, no. 1:133–162.

Avila, Alfredo, ‘‘Catholic Nations: Spain and Spanish America in theEarly Nineteenth Century,’’ 30, no. 2:589–601.

Bailey, John, and Pablo Paras, ‘‘Perceptions and Attitudes about Cor-ruption and Democracy in Mexico,’’ 22, no. 1: 57–81.

Banwell, Julia, ‘‘Death and Disruption in the Photography of theDecena Tragica,’’ 30, no. 1:104–121.

Bartolucci, Jorge, ‘‘Developing Science in Developing Countries: TheHarvard College Observatory and the Establishment of ModernAstrophysics in Mexico,’’ 21, no. 1:33–58.

Benıtez Manaut, Raul, Andrew Selee, and Cynthia J. Arnson, ‘‘FrozenNegotiations: The Peace Process in Chiapas,’’ 22, no. 1:131–151.

Blancas Neria, Andres, y Carlos Lopez–Gomez, ‘‘Integracion Tec-nologica y Financiera de Pequenas y Medianas Empresas: Haciauna Nueva Polıtica de Industrializacion en Mexico,’’ 30, no.2:522–556.

Boldy, Steven, ‘‘De la afrenta al melodrama: la familia, la violencia y elcrimen en las ultimas obras de Carlos Fuentes,’’ 28, no. 2:243–264.

649

Page 2: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Browning, Anjali, ‘‘Corn, Tomatoes and a Dead Dog: Mexican Agricul-tural Restructuring after NAFTA and Rural Responses to DecliningMaize Production in Oaxaca, Mexico’’ 29, no.2: 85–119.

Bruhn, Kathleen, ‘‘Choosing How to Choose: From Democratic Pri-maries to Unholy Alliances in Mexico’s Gubernatorial Elections,’’30, No. 1:212–240.

Burden, David K., ‘‘Reform before La Reforma: Liberals, Conserva-tives and the Debate over Immigration, 1846–1855,’’ 23, no.2:283–316.

Butler, Matthew, ‘‘Mexican Nicodemus: The Apostleship of RefugioPadilla, Cristero, on the Islas Marıas,’’ 25, no. 2:271–306.

Calderon-Zaks, Michael, ‘‘Debated Whiteness amid World Events:Mexican and Mexican American Subjectivity and the U.S.’ Rela-tionship with the Americas, 1924–1936,’’ 27, no. 2:325–360.

Camacho de Schmidt, Aurora, ‘‘Pas de deux: la mutua lectura deOctavio Paz y Robert Motherwell,’’ 26, no. 1:95–110.

Camp, Roderic Ai, ‘‘Mexico’s Democratic Revolution, Where is itLeading?’’ 25, no. 2:367–376.

Campos, Isaac, ‘‘Degeneration and the Origins of Mexico’s War onDrugs,’’ 26, no. 2:379–408.

Castillo-Munoz, Veronica, ‘‘Historical Roots of Rural Migration: LandReform, Corn Credit, and the Displacement of Rural Farmers inNayarit Mexico, 1900–1952’’, 29, no. 1:36–60.

Castro, J. Justin, ‘‘Radiotelegraphy to Broadcasting: Wireless Commu-nications in Porfirian and Revolutionary Mexico, 1899–1924,’’ 29,no. 2:335–365.

Chust, Manuel, and Ivana Frasquet, ‘‘Orıgenes federales del repub-licanismo en Mexico. 1810–1824’’ 24, no. 2:363–398.

Cohn, Deborah, ‘‘The Mexican Intelligentsia, 1950–1968: Cosmopol-itanism, National Identity and the State,’’ 21, no. 1:141–182.

Connaughton, Brian, ‘‘Carmen Castenada Garcıa: Historiadora poli-facetica, inquieta y solidaria’’ 23, no. 2:205–218.

Conover, Cornelius, ‘‘Reassessing the Rise of Mexico’s Virgin of Gua-dalupe, 1650s-1780s,’’ 27, no. 2:251–280.

Conway, Frederick J., James Gerber, and Michael Topmiller, ‘‘USMigration to Mexico: Numbers, Issues, and Scenarios,’’ 27, no.1: 45–71.

Cornelius, Wayne A., and Enrico A. Marcelli, ‘‘Immigrant Voting inHome-Country Elections: Potential Consequences of Extendingthe Franchise to Expatriate Mexicans Residing in the UnitedStates,’’ 21, no. 2:429–460.

Costeloe, Michael P, ‘‘William Bullock and the Mexican Connection,’’22, no. 2:275–310.

650 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 3: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Cummins Munoz, Elizabeth, ‘‘La historia encarnada, Llanto de Car-men Boullosa’’ 29, no. 2:459–477.

De Remes, Alain, ‘‘Democratization and Dispersion of Power: NewScenarios in Mexican Federalism,’’ 22, no. 1:175–204.

Del Valle Pavon, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializacion de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de Mexico en la segundamitad del siglo XVIII,’’ 26, no. 2:181–206.

Depetris, Carolina, ‘‘Influencia del orientalismo en la explicacion delorigen del pueblo y ruinas mayas: las tribus perdidas de Israel y elcaso Waldeck,’’ 25, no. 2:227–246.

Di Piramo, Daniela, ‘‘Beyond Modernity: Irony, Fantasy, and the Chal-lenge to Grand Narratives in Subcomandante Marcos’ Tales,’’ 27,no.1:177–205.

Dıez, Jordi, ‘‘Legislative Oversight of the Armed Forces in Mexico,’’24, no. 1:113–145.

Dion, Michelle, ‘‘The Political Origins of Social Security in Mexicoduring the Cardenas and Avila Camacho Administrations,’’ 21,no.1:59–95.

Easterling, Stuart, ‘‘Gender and Poetry Writing in the Light of Mex-ico’s Liberal Victory, 1867 – ca. 1890,’’ 27, no.1 2:97–142.

Echanove Huacuja, Flavia, ‘‘Agricultural Policy and Feed Industry inMexico’’, 29, no. 1:61–84.

Edmonds-Poli, Emily, ‘‘Decentralization under the Fox Administra-tion: Progress or Stagnation?’’ 22, no. 2:387–416.

Egan, Linda, ‘‘Carlos Monsivais, in Collective and Personal Memory,’’27, no. 1:225–231.

Eisenstadt, Todd, ‘‘Indigenous Attitudes and Ethnic Identity Con-struction in Mexico,’’ 22, no. 1:107–129.

Epplin, Craig, ‘‘Sacrifice and Recognition in Carlos Reygadas’sJapon,’’ 28, no. 2:287–306.

Espinosa, Angela Cecilia, ‘‘La masculinidad marginada en la vanguardiapost-Revolucionaria: El Caso de ‘‘El Cafe de Nadie’’ de ArquelesVela, 30, no. 2:397–420.

Fallon, Paul, ‘‘Time for (a Reading) Community? The Border LiteraryField(s) in the 1980s and 1990s,’’ 25, no. 1:47–70.

Fleuriet, K. Jill, ‘‘Articulating Distress on Multiple Levels: Illness, His-tory, and Culture among the Kumiai of Baja California, Mexico,’’23, no. 1:155–180.

Francois, Marie, ‘‘Housekeeping, Development, and Culture in Por-firian Chihuahua and Sonora,’’ 27, no. 2:281–324.

Frasquet, Ivana, and Manuel Chust, ‘‘Orıgenes federales del repub-licanismo en Mexico. 1810–1824’’ 24, no. 2:363–398.

Contributions by Author 651

Page 4: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Galante, Mirian, ‘‘De revoluciones, republicas y naciones. Miradassobre America Latina desde la Nueva Historia Politica,’’ 22, no.2:417–448.

——, ‘‘La prevencion frente al despotismo. El primer liberalismo enNueva Espana y Mexico, 1808–1834,’’ 24, no. 2:421–453.

Gaytan, Marie Sarita, and Ana G. Valenzuela Zapata, ‘‘Mas alla delmito: mujeres, tequila y nacion,’’ 28, no. 1:183–208.

Gerber, James, Michael Topmiller, and Frederick J. Conway, ‘‘USMigration to Mexico: Numbers, Issues, and Scenarios,’’ 27, no.1: 45–71.

Gilbert, Dennis, ‘‘Social Class and Voter Preference in Recent MexicanElections,’’ 28, no. 2:327–350.

Gillingham, Paul, ‘‘Rural Teachers and State Facades in Guerrero,1930–1950,’’ 22, no. 2:331–360.

Gollnick, Brian, ‘‘Silent Idylls, Double Lives: Sex and the City in Sal-vador Novo’s La estatua de sal,’’ 21, no. 1:231–250.

Gomez Carpinteiro, Francisco Javier, ‘‘La modernidad contendida.Estado, comunidades rurales y capitalismo en la posrevolucion,’’21, 1:97–139.

Gomez-Vilchis, Ricardo R., ‘‘Democratic Transition and PresidentialApproval in Mexico,’’ 28, no. 1:43–71

Gonzales, Michael J., ‘‘Imagining Mexico in 1921: Visions of the Rev-olutionary State and Society in the Centennial Celebration inMexico City,’’ 25, no. 2:247–270.

Gonzalez de Bustamante, Celeste, ‘‘1968 Olympic Dreams and Tlate-lolco Nightmares: Imagining and Imaging Modernity on Televi-sion,’’ 26, no. 1:1–30.

Gonzalez Rivas, Marcela, ‘‘Trade Openness, Infrastructure, and theWellbeing of Mexico’s South,’’ 27, no. 2:407–430.

Gordus, Andrew M., ‘‘La voz fronteriza: Oscar Monroy and the Corri-do Tradition along the US-Mexico Border,’’ 27, no. 2:385–406.

Grenier, Yvon, ‘‘Octavio Paz: An Intellectual and his Critics,’’ 21,no.1:251–267.

Grofe, Michael, and Stefano Varese, ‘‘Notas sobre la territorialidad,sacralidad y economıa polıtica benniza/binigula’/beneshon’’ 23,no. 2:219–252.

Grunstein Dickter, Arturo, ‘‘In the Shadow of Oil: Francisco J. Mugicavs. Telephone Transnational Corporations in Cardenista, Mexi-co,’’ 21, no. 1:1–32.

Guardino, Peter, ‘‘In the Name of Civilization and with a Bible inTheir Hands:’’ Religion and the 1846–48 Mexican-AmericanWar,’’ by Peter Guardino,’’ 30, no. 2:342–365.

652 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 5: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Henck, Nicholas, ‘‘Laying a Ghost to Rest: Subcommander Marcos’Playing of the Indigenous Card,’’ 25, no. 1:155–170.

——, ‘‘The Subcommander and the Sardinian: Marcos and Gramsci,’’29, no. 2:428–458.

Hernandez, Jose Angel, ‘‘From Conquest to Colonization: Indios andColonization Policies after Mexican Independence,’’ 26, no.2:291–322.

Hernandez Rodrıguez, Rogelio, ‘‘Conflicto y colaboracion entre po-deres. La experiencia reciente de los gobiernos divididos enMexico,’’ 21, no. 1:183–211.

Hidalgo, Dennis R., ‘‘The Evolution of History and the Informal Empire:La Decena Tragica in the British Press,’’ 23, no. 2:317–354.

Hirth, Kenneth G., and Aurelio Lopez Corral, ‘‘Terrazguero Small-holders and the Function of Agricultural Tribute in Sixteenth-Century Tepeaca, Mexico,’’ 28, no. 1:73–93.

Hurley, Teresa M., ‘‘Exile and the Other in Two Short Stories by ElenaGarro,’’ 21, no. 1:213–229.

Hurtado, Guillermo, and Florencia Niszt, ‘‘Emilio Uranga, ideologodel lopezmateısmo,’’ 28, no. 2:307–326.

Ibarra, Ana Carolina, ‘‘Ernesto de la Torre Villar, erudite, historiador yhumanista, maestro generoso,’’ 25, no. 2:181–188.

Izcara Palacios, Simon Pedro, ‘‘El declive del contrabando de indo-cumentados en Mexico,’’ 28, no. 2:351–376.

Jimenez-Sandoval, Saul, ‘‘Capitalismo, deseo y el anti-Edipo en Lasbatallas en el desierto,’’ 27, no. 2:431–448.

Kuntz Ficker, Sandra, ‘‘La historiografıa economica reciente sobre elMexico decimononico,’’ 21, no. 2:461–492.

Landavazo, Marco Antonio, ‘‘El asesinato de gachupines en la Guerrade Independencia mexicana,’’ 23, no. 2:253–282.

Lara Otaola, Miguel Angel, and Mathieu Tromme, ‘‘Enrique Pena Nie-to’s National Anti-Corruption Commission and the Challenges ofWaging War against Corruption in Mexico,’’ 30, no. 2:557–588.

Lehnen, Jeremy, ‘‘Disjunctive Urbanisms: Walls, Violence and Margin-ality in Rodrigo Pla’s La zona (2007),’’ 28, no. 1:163–182.

Loaeza, Soledad, ‘‘Vicente Fox’s Presidential Style and the New Mex-ican Presidency,’’ 22, no. 1:1–32.

Lomnitz, Claudio, ‘‘On the Improbable Popularity of Friedrich Katz,’’27, no. 1: 233–239.

Lopez Corral, Aurelio, and Kenneth G. Hirth, ‘‘Terrazguero Small-holders and the Function of Agricultural Tribute in Sixteenth-Century Tepeaca, Mexico,’’ 28 no. 1:73–93.

Lopez–Gomez, Carlos, y Andres Blancas Neria, ‘‘Integracion Tec-nologica y Financiera de Pequenas y Medianas Empresas: Hacia

Contributions by Author 653

Page 6: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

una Nueva Polıtica de Industrializacion en Mexico,’’ 30, no.2:522–556.

Marcelli, Enrico A., and Wayne A. Cornelius, ‘‘Immigrant Voting inHome-Country Elections: Potential Consequences of Extendingthe Franchise to Expatriate Mexicans Residing in the UnitedStates,’’ 21, no. 2:429–460.

Marinez Navarro, Freddy, and Leonardo Vivas, ‘‘Violence, Gover-nance, and Economic Development at the U.S.-Mexico Border:The Case of Nuevo Laredo and its Lessons,’’ 28, no. 2:377–416.

Massey, Douglas S., Jacob S. Rugh, and Karen A. Pren, ‘‘The Geogra-phy of Undocumented Mexican Migration,’’ 26, no. 1:129–152.

Matthews, Michael, ‘‘De Viaje: Elite Views of Modernity and the Por-firian Railway,’’ 26, no. 2:251–322.

Mattiace, Shannan, and Tomas Nonnenmacher, ‘‘The Organization ofHacienda Labor during the Mexican Revolution: Evidence fromYucatan,’’ 30, no. 2:366–396.

McCrea, Heather L., ‘‘On Sacred Ground: The Church and BurialRites in Nineteenth–Century Yucatan, Mexico,’’ 23, no. 1:33–62.

McNamara, Patrick J., ‘‘Rewriting Zapata: Generational Conflict onthe Eve of the Mexican Revolution,’’ 30, no. 1:122–149.

Meade, Everard, ‘‘From Sex Strangler to Model Citizen: Mexico’s MostFamous Murderer and the Defeat of the Death Penalty,’’ 26, no.2:323–378.

Medina, Ruben, ‘‘El mestizaje a traves de la frontera: Vasconcelos yAnzaldua,’’ 25, no. 1:101–123.

Menton, Seymour, ‘‘Carlos Fuentes y Yo,’’ 28, no. 2:225–242.Mino Grijalva, Manuel, ‘‘Acceso a la justicia y conflictos en el Valle de

Toluca (Nueva Espana) durante el siglo XVIII. Una estimacioncuantitativa,’’ 23, no. 1:1–31.

——, ‘‘El ‘‘Cacao guayaquil’’ en Nueva Espana. Siglo XVIII,’’ 25, no.1:1–18.

Moreno Acevedo, Elda, and Sergio Quezada, ‘‘Del deficit a la insol-vencia. Finanzas y real hacienda en Yucatan, 1760–1816,’’ 21, no.2:307–331.

Mottier, Nicole, ‘‘Drug Gangs and Politics in Ciudad Juarez: 1928–1936,’’ 25, no. 1:19–46.

Munoz, Laura, ‘‘De consul a ministro: Gilberto Crespo y Martınez enLa Habana,’’ 25, no. 2:307–326.

Navarro, Aaron W., ‘‘The Nature of Mexican Politics,’’ 29, no. 2:522–542.Niblo, Diane M., and Stephen R. Niblo, ‘‘Acapulco in Dreams and

Reality,’’ 24, no. 1:31–51.Niblo, Stephen R., and Diane M. Niblo, ‘‘Acapulco in Dreams and

Reality,’’ 24, no. 1:31–51.

654 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 7: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Nishikawa, Katsuo A., ‘‘Rethinking the Meaning of Citizenship in Post-PRI Mexico: Can the State Change its Image?,’’ 28, no. 1:21–42.

Niszt, Florencia, and Guillermo Hurtado, ‘‘Emilio Uranga, ideologodel lopezmateısmo,’’ 28, no. 2:307–326.

Nonnenmacher, Tomas, and Shannan Mattiace, ‘‘The Organization ofHacienda Labor during the Mexican Revolution: Evidence fromYucatan,’’ 30, no. 2:366–396.

O’Rourke, Kathryn, ‘‘Artful Copies: The Urrutia Collection and Porfir-ian Visual Culture,’’ 30, no. 1:31–70.

Osten, Sarah, ‘‘Trials by Fire: National Political Lessons from FailedState Elections in Post-revolutionary Mexico, 1920–25,’’ 29, no.1:238–279.

Overmayer-Velazquez, Mark, ‘‘Portraits of a Lady: Visions of Moder-nity in Porfirian Oaxaca City,’’ 23, no. 1:63–100.

Ozler, S . _Ilgu, ‘‘Out of the Plaza and into the Office: Social MovementLeaders in the PRD,’’ 25, no. 1:125–154.

Palerm-Viqueira, Jacinta, ‘‘Self-Management of Irrigation Systens,a Typology: The Mexican Case,’’ 22, no. 2: 361–186.

Paras, Pablo, and John Bailey, ‘‘Perceptions and Attitudes about Cor-ruption and Democracy in Mexico,’’ 22, no. 1: 57–81.

Parodı, Claudia, ‘‘Fracturas linguısticas: Los estridentistas,’’ 22, no.2:311–360.

Pascual Gay, Juan, ‘‘Cosmopolitismo versus nacionalismo. El intelec-tual en Mexico 1869 -1894,’’ 30, no. 1:1–30.

Passananti, Thomas P., ‘‘Dynamizing the Economy in a faconirreguliere: A New Look at Financial Politics in Porfirian Mexico’’24, no. 1:1–29.

Pellicer, Juan, ‘‘Bridging Worlds: Transtextuality, Montage and thePoetics of Babel,’’ 26, no. 2:239–250.

Perez Vejo, Tomas, ‘‘El problema de la nacion en las independenciasamericanas: Una propuesta teorica,’’ 24, no. 2:221–244.

Perkins, Stephen M., ‘‘Macehuales and the Corporate Solution: Colo-nial Secessions in Nahua Central Mexico,’’ 21, no. 1:277–306.

Peschard, Jacqueline, ‘‘Control over Party and Campaign Finance inMexico,’’ 22, no. 1:83–105.

Piacenti, David, ‘‘Yucatec-Mayan Im/migration to the Mission andEdison Neighborhoods: A Comparison of Social Conditions andIm/migrant Satisfaction,’’ 28, no. 1:95–132.

Pozas Horcasitas, Ricardo, ‘‘La Revista Mexicana de Literatura:territorio de la nueva elite intelectual (1955–1965),’’ 24, no.1:53–78.

Pren, Karen A., Douglas S. Massey, and Jacob S. Rugh, ‘‘The Geogra-phy of Undocumented Mexican Migration,’’ 26, no. 1:129–152.

Contributions by Author 655

Page 8: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Quezada, Sergio, and Elda Moreno Acevedo, ‘‘Del deficit a la insol-vencia. Finanzas y real hacienda en Yucatan, 1760–1816,’’ 21, no.2:307–331.

Quijada, Monica, ‘‘From Spain to New Spain: Revisiting the PotestasPopuli in Hispanic Political Thought’’ 24, no. 2:185–220.

Quiroz, Enriqueta, ‘‘La moneda menuda en la circulacion monetariade la Ciudad de Mexico, Siglo XVIII,’’ 22, no. 2:219–250.

Ramırez, Clara, ‘‘Formas de expresion de las ideas polıticas en elmundo hispanico, siglos XVI y XVII,’’ 26, no. 2:163–180.

Ramırez-Pimienta, Juan Carlos, ‘‘Chicago lindo y querido si muerolejos de ti: el pasito duranguense, la onda grupera y las nuevasgeografıas de la identidad popular Mexicana,’’ 26, no. 1:31–45.

Reich, Peter L., ‘‘Recent Research on the Legal History of ModernMexico,’’ 23, no. 1:181–193.

Reynoso Jaime, Irving, ‘‘Sistema electoral y elites regionales: Elec-ciones municipales y de diputados en Cuernavaca y Cuautla deAmilpas, 1812–1835,’’ 25, no. 2:189–226.

Ribas, Alberto, ‘‘Transatlantic Fuentes: Between ‘‘The Two Shores’’ ofPluralism and Glossocentrism,’’ 27, no. 1:143–175.

Riguzzi, Paolo, ‘‘Sistema financiero, banca privada y credito agrıcolaen Mexico, 1897–1913:¿Un desencuentro anunciado?,’’ 21, no.2:333–367.

Rıos Molina, Andres, ‘‘La psicosis del repatriado. De los camposagrıcolas en Estados Unidos al Manicomio La Castaneda en laciudad de Mexico, 1920–1944,’’ 27, no. 2:361–384.

Robinson, Amy, ‘‘Chucho el Roto in Mexico’s Post-1968 Cinema:Banditry, State-Sponsored Violence, and the Alternative NationalFamily,’’ 30, no. 2:446–478.

Rodrıguez Cadena, Marıa de los Angeles, ‘‘El pasado nacional comonarrative de ficcion o la historia es una telenovela,’’ 30, no.1:180–211.

Rodrıguez O., Jaime E., ‘‘New Spain and the 1808 Crisis of the Span-ish Monarchy,’’ 24, no. 2:245–288.

——, ‘‘Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos,’’ 30, no. 2:299–312.Rosas, Ana Elizabeth, ‘‘Historical Paths to Mexican American Citizen-

ship’’ 24, no. 1:147–167.Rose, Susan, and Robert Shaw, ‘‘The Gamble: Circular Mexican Migra-

tion and the Return on Remittances’’ 24, no. 1: 79–111.Rugh, Jacob S., Douglas S. Massey, and Karen A. Pren, ‘‘The Geogra-

phy of Undocumented Mexican Migration,’’ 26, no. 1:129–152.Ruiz Medrano, Carlos Ruben, ‘‘Rebelion y patrones de resistencia

indıgena en las Fronteras de San Luis Colotlan, Nueva Espana,siglos XVI-XVIII,’’ 29, no. 1:200–237.

656 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 9: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Salmeron Sangines, Pedro Agustın, ‘‘La geografıa del caos: Un mapade la escision revolucionaria (agosto-noviembre de 1914)’’ 29,no. 2:366–396.

Sanchez Prado, Ignacio M., ‘‘Claiming Liberalism: Enrique Krauze,Vuelta, Letras Libres and the Reconfigurations of the MexicanIntellectual Class,’’ 26, no. 1:47–78.

——, ‘‘Estrategias para mirar la nacion. El giro visual de los estudiosculturales mexicanos en lengua inglesa,’’ 27, no. 2:449–470.

Sanchez Santiro, Ernest, ‘‘Las finanzas publicas de Mexico en elprimer Imperio y la Republica federal (1821–1835). Una revisionhistoriografica,’’ 24, no. 2:399–420.

Sanders, Nichole, ‘‘Gender and Honor in Mexican History: Liberalismand Revolution in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Mexico,’’27, no. 1: 207–223.

Sarialioglu Hayali, Ayca, ‘‘Role of Financial Derivative Instruments inthe Emerging Market Financial Crises of the Late 1990s: TheMexican Case,’’ 30, no. 2:479–521.

Schaefer, Timo, ‘‘Soldiers and Civilians: The War of Independence inOaxaca, 1814–1815,’’ 29, no. 1:149–174.

Schell, William, Jr., ‘‘Emiliano Zapata and the Old Regime: Myth,Memory and Method,’’ 25, no. 2:327–366.

Selee, Andrew, Raul Benıtez Manaut, and Cynthia J. Arnson, ‘‘FrozenNegotiations: The Peace Process in Chiapas,’’ 22, no. 1:131–151.

Serna, Ana Marıa, ‘‘Periodistas mexicanos: ¿voceros de la nueva Doc-trina Monroe?’’ 26, no. 2:207–238.

Serrano Ortega, Jose Antonio, ‘‘Deshaciendo el consenso: La histor-iografıa sobre el proceso de independencia de la Nueva Espana,1953–1997,’’ 29, no. 1:120–148.

Shaw, Robert, and Susan Rose, ‘‘The Gamble: Circular Mexican Migra-tion and the Return on Remittances’’ 24, no. 1: 79–111.

Smith, Benjamin, ‘‘Defending ‘‘Our Beautiful Freedom’’: State For-mation and Local Autonomy in Oaxaca, 1930–1940,’’ 23, no.1:125–153.

Smith, Michael M., ‘‘Andres G. Garcıa: Venustiano Carranza’s Eyes,Ears, and Voice on the Border,’’ 23, no. 2:355–386.

Solar, Carlos, ‘‘State, Violence and Security in Mexico: Developmentsand Consequences for Democracy,’’ 30, no. 1: 241–255.

Soto Lageava, Gabriela, ‘‘Bringing the Revolution to Medical Schools:Social Service and a Rural Health Emphasis in 1930s Mexico,’’ 29,no. 2:397–427.

Steinberg, Samuel, ‘‘Tlatelolco me bautizo: Literary Renewal and theNeoliberal Transition,’’ 28, no. 2:265–286.

Contributions by Author 657

Page 10: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Stone, Robert S., ‘‘Pito Perez: Mexican Middleman,’’ 21, no. 2:369–402.

Teran Fuentes,Mariana, ‘‘De nacion espanola a federacion mexicana. Laopinion Publica en la formacion de la nacion,’’ 22, no. 2:251–274.

——, ‘‘Por lealtad al rey, a la patria y a la religion.Los anos de tran-sicion en la provincia de Zacatecas: 1808–1814’’ 24, no. 2:289–324.

Topmiller, Michael, Frederick J. Conway, and James Gerber, ‘‘USMigration to Mexico: Numbers, Issues, and Scenarios,’’ 27, no.1: 45–71.

Tromme, Mathieu, and Miguel Angel Lara Otaola, ‘‘Enrique Pena Nie-to’s National Anti-Corruption Commission and the Challenges ofWaging War against Corruption in Mexico,’’ 30, no. 2:557–588.

Valenzuela Zapata, Ana G., and Marie Sarita Gaytan, ‘‘Mas alla delmito: mujeres, tequila y nacion,’’ 28, no. 1:183–208.

Van Young, Eric, ‘‘Paul J. Vanderwood-An Obituary and Remem-brance,’’ 28, no. 1:1–20.

Vanden Berghe, Kristine, ‘‘Cambios y constantes en la narrativa delSubcomandante Marcos: de los relatos a la novela Muertos in-comodos (falta lo que falta),’’ 23, no. 2:387–408.

Varese, Stefano, and Michael Grofe, ‘‘Notas sobre la territorialidad,sacralidad y economıa polıtica benniza/binigula’/beneshon,’’ 23,no. 2:219–252.

Vazquez, Juan de Dios, ‘‘Espectros en el archivo: Cementerio de papelde Fritz Glockner y el retorno del pasado reprimido al PalacioNegro de Lecumberri’’ 29, no. 2:478–502.

Vilalta, Carlos J., ‘‘Anomıa institucional, espacialidad y temporalidaden las muertes asociadas a la lucha contra la delincuencia orga-nizada en Mexico,’’ 29, no. 1: 280–319.

Vincent Lepp, Kathryn, ‘‘Todos los jefes: Reflections on the Origins ofUC MEXUS,’’ 30, no. 2:284–298.

Vivancos Perez, Ricardo F., ‘‘Feminismo, traduccion cultural ytraicion en Malinche de Laura Esquivel,’’ 26, no. 1:111–127.

Vivas, Leonardo, and Freddy Marinez Navarro, ‘‘Violence, Gover-nance, and Economic Development at the U.S.-Mexico Border:The Case of Nuevo Laredo and its Lessons,’’ 28, no. 2:377–416.

Wakild, Emily, ‘‘Naturalizing Modernity: Urban Parks, Public Gardensand Drainage Projects in Porfirian Mexico City,’’ 23, no. 1: 101–123.

Weiner, Richard, ‘‘Antecedents to Daniel Cosıo Villegas’s Post-Revolutionary Ideology: Justo Santos’s Assault on Porfirian Prog-ress’’ 30, no. 1:71–103.

Weis, Robert, ‘‘Immigrant Entrepreneurs, Bread, and Class Negotia-tion in Postrevolutionary Mexico City,’’ 25, no. 1:71–100.

658 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 11: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Williams, Tamara R., ¿Hay cadaver en la bodega? Re-letura (en trespartes) del indıgena mexicano en la obra de Alfonso Reyes,’’ 30,no. 1:150–179.

Wirth, Clifford J., ‘‘Democracy in Mexico City: The Impacts of Struc-tural Reforms,’’ 22, no. 1:153–173.

Wolfe, Mikael, ‘‘Considering the Alternatives: Multi-disciplinary Per-spectives on Agriculture, Water and Migration in Mexico underState Developmentalism and Neoliberalism,’’ 29, no. 1: 1–2.

——, ‘‘The Historical Dynamics of Mexico’s Groundwater Crisis in LaLaguna: Knowledge, Resources and Profit, 1930s- 1960s’’, 29, no.1:3–35.

Wuhs, Steven T., ‘‘Democratization and the Dynamics of CandidateSelection Rule Change in Mexico, 1991–2003,’’ 22, no. 1:33–55.

Yaworsky, William R., ‘‘At the Whim of the State: Neoliberalism andNongovernmental Organizations in Guerrero, Mexico,’’ 21, no.2:403–427.

Contributions by Author 659

Page 12: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Contributions by Title

‘‘1968 Olympic Dreams and Tlatelolco Nightmares: Imagining andImaging Modernity on Television,’’ by Celeste Gonzalez deBustamante, 26, no. 1:1–30. 27.

‘‘Acapulco in Dreams and Reality’’ by Stephen R. Niblo and Diane M.Niblo, 24, no. 1:31–51.

‘‘Acceso a la justicia y conflictos en el Valle de Toluca (Nueva Espana)durante el siglo XVIII. Una estimacion cuantitativa,’’ by ManuelMino Grijalva, 23, no. 1:1–31.

‘‘Agricultural Policy and Feed Industry in Mexico’’, by Flavia EchanoveHuacuja, 29, no. 1:61–84.

‘‘Andres G. Garcıa: Venustiano Carranza’s Eyes, Ears, and Voice onthe Border,’’ by Michael M. Smith, 23, no. 2:355–386.

‘‘Anomıa institucional, espacialidad y temporalidad en las muertesasociadas a la lucha contra la delincuencia organizada enMexico,’’ by Carlos J. Vilalta, 29, no. 1: 280–319.

‘‘Antecedents to Daniel Cosıo Villegas’s Post-Revolutionary Ideology:Justo Santos’s Assault on Porfirian Progress,’’ by Richard Weiner,30, no. 1:71–103.

‘‘Artful Copies: The Urrutia Collection and Porfirian Visual Culture,’’by Kathryn O’Rourke, 30, no. 1:31–70.

‘‘Articulating Distress on Multiple Levels: Illness, History, and Cultureamong the Kumiai of Baja California, Mexico,’’ by K. Jill Fleuriet,23, no. 1:155–180.

‘‘At the Whim of the State: Neoliberalism and NongovernmentalOrganizations in Guerrero, Mexico,’’ by William R. Yaworsky,21, no. 2:403–427.

‘‘Backwater Bureaucrat to Revolutionary Myth-Maker: BernardoM. de Leon, Caciquismo, and Memory in Nayarit, 1920–1990,’’by Ryan M. Alexander, 27, no. 1: 73–95.

‘‘Beyond Modernity: Irony, Fantasy, and the Challenge to Grand Nar-ratives in Subcomandante Marcos’ Tales,’’ by Daniela di Piramo,27, no.1:177–205.

‘‘Bridging Worlds: Transtextuality, Montage and the Poetics ofBabel,’’ by Juan Pellicer, 26, no. 2:239–250.

‘‘Bringing the Revolution to Medical Schools: Social Service anda Rural Health Emphasis in 1930s Mexico,’’ by Gabriela SotoLageava, 29, no. 2:397–427.

‘‘Cambios y constantes en la narrativa del Subcomandante Marcos: delos relatos a la novela Muertos incomodos (falta lo que falta),’’by Kristine Vanden Berghe, 23, no. 2:387–408.

660

Page 13: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

‘‘Capitalismo, deseo y el anti-Edipo en Las batallas en el desierto,’’ bySaul Jimenez-Sandoval, 27, no. 2:431–448.

‘‘Carlos Fuentes y Yo,’’ by Seymour Menton, 28, no. 2:225–242.‘‘Carlos Monsivais, in Collective and Personal Memory,’’ by Linda

Egan, 27, no. 1:225–231.‘‘Carmen Castenada Garcıa: Historiadora polifacetica, inquieta y so-

lidaria’’ by Brian Connaughton, 23, no. 2:‘‘Catholic Nations: Spain and Spanish America in the Early Nine-

teenth Century,’’ by Alfredo Avila, 30, no. 2:589–601.‘‘Chicago lindo y querido si muero lejos de ti: el pasito duranguense,

la onda grupera y las nuevas geografıas de la identidad popularMexicana,’’ by Juan Carlos Ramırez-Pimienta, 26, no. 1:31–45.

‘‘Choosing How to Choose: From Democratic Primaries to UnholyAlliances in Mexico’s Gubernatorial Elections,’’ by KathleenBruhn, 30, no. 1:212–240.

‘‘Chucho el Roto in Mexico’s Post-1968 Cinema: Banditry, State-Sponsored Violence, and the Alternative National Family,’’ byAmy Robinson, 30, no. 2:446–478.

‘‘Claiming Liberalism: Enrique Krauze, Vuelta, Letras Libres and theReconfigurations of the Mexican Intellectual Class,’’ by IgnacioM. Sanchez Prado, 26, no. 1:47–78.

‘‘Comercializacion de cacao de Guayaquil por los mercaderes delConsulado de Mexico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’ byGuillermina del Valle Pavon, 26, no. 2:181–206.

‘‘Conflicto y colaboracion entre poderes. La experiencia reciente delos gobiernos divididos en Mexico,’’ by Rogelio HernandezRodrıguez, 21, no. 1:183–211.

‘‘Considering the Alternatives: Multi-disciplinary Perspectives onAgriculture, Water and Migration in Mexico under State Devel-opmentalism and Neoliberalism,’’ by Mikael Wolfe, 29, no. 1:1–2.

‘‘Control over Party and Campaign Finance in Mexico,’’ by JacquelinePeschard, 22, no. 1:83–105.

‘‘Corn, Tomatoes and a Dead Dog: Mexican Agricultural Restructur-ing after NAFTA and Rural Responses to Declining Maize Produc-tion in Oaxaca, Mexico’’ by Anjali Browning, 29, no. 2: 85–119.

‘‘Cosmopolitismo versus nacionalismo. El intelectual en Mexico 1869-1894,’’ by Juan Pascual Gay, 30, no. 1:1–30.

‘‘De consul a ministro: Gilberto Crespo y Martınez en La Habana,’’ byLaura Munoz, 25, no. 2:307–326.

‘‘De la afrenta al melodrama: la familia, la violencia y el crimen enlas ultimas obras de Carlos Fuentes,’’ by Steven Boldy, 28, no.2:243–264.

Contributions by Title 661

Page 14: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

‘‘De nacion espanola a federacion mexicana. La opinion Publica en laformacion de la nacion,’’ by Mariana Teran Fuentes, 22, no.2:251–274.

‘‘De revoluciones, republicas y naciones. Miradas sobre AmericaLatina desde la Nueva Historia Politica,’’ by Mirian Galante, 22,no. 2:417–448.

‘‘De Viaje: Elite Views of Modernity and the Porfirian Railway,’’ byMichael Matthews, 26, no. 2:251–322.

‘‘Death and Disruption in the Photography of the Decena Tragica,’’ byJulia Banwell, 30, no. 1:104–121.

‘‘Debated Whiteness amid World Events: Mexican and MexicanAmerican Subjectivity and the U.S.’ Relationship with theAmericas, 1924–1936,’’ by Michael Calderon-Zaks, 27, no.2:325–360.

‘‘Decentralization under the Fox Administration: Progress or Stagna-tion?’’ by Emily Edmonds-Poli, 22, no. 2:387–416.

‘‘Defending ‘‘Our Beautiful Freedom’’: State Formation and LocalAutonomy in Oaxaca, 1930–1940,’’ by Benjamin Smith, 23, no.1:125–153.

‘‘Degeneration and the Origins of Mexico’s War on Drugs,’’ by IsaacCampos, 26, no. 2:379–408.

‘‘Del deficit a la insolvencia. Finanzas y real hacienda en Yucatan,1760–1816,’’ by Sergio Quezada and Elda Moreno Acevedo, 21,no. 2:307–331.

‘‘Democracy in Mexico City: The Impacts of Structural Reforms,’’ byClifford J. Wirth, 22, no. 1:153–173.

‘‘Democratic Transition and Presidential Approval in Mexico,’’ byRicardo R. Gomez-Vilchis, 28, no. 1:43–71

‘‘Democratization and Dispersion of Power: New Scenarios in Mexi-can Federalism,’’ by Alain De Remes, 22, no. 1:175–204.

‘‘Democratization and the Dynamics of Candidate Selection RuleChange in Mexico, 1991–2003,’’ by Steven T. Wuhs, 22, no.1:33–55.

‘‘Deshaciendo el consenso: La historiografıa sobre el proceso de in-dependencia de la Nueva Espana, 1953–1997,’’ by Jose AntonioSerrano Ortega, 29, no. 1:120–148.

‘‘Developing Science in Developing Countries: The Harvard CollegeObservatory and the Establishment of Modern Astrophysics inMexico,’’ by Jorge Bartolucci, 21, no. 1:33–58.

‘‘Disjunctive Urbanisms: Walls, Violence and Marginality in RodrigoPla’s La zona (2007),’’ by Jeremy Lehnen, 28, no. 1:163–182.

‘‘Drug Gangs and Politics in Ciudad Juarez: 1928–1936,’’ by NicoleMottier, 25, no. 1:19–46.

662 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 15: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

‘‘Dynamizing the Economy in a facon irreguliere: A New Look atFinancial Politics in Porfirian Mexico’’ by Thomas P. Passananti,24, no. 1:1–29.

‘‘El ‘Cacao guayaquil’ en Nueva Espana. Siglo XVIII,’’ by Manuel MinoGrijalva, 25, no. 1:1–18.

‘‘El asesinato de gachupines en la Guerra de Independencia mexica-na,’’ by Marco Antonio Landavazo, 23, no. 2:253–282.

‘‘El declive del contrabando de indocumentados en Mexico,’’ bySimon Pedro Izcara Palacios, 28, no. 2:351–376.

‘‘El mestizaje a traves de la frontera: Vasconcelos y Anzaldua,’’ byRuben Medina, 25, no. 1:101–123.

‘‘El pasado nacional como narrative de ficcion o la historia es unatelenovela,’’ by Marıa de los Angeles Rodrıguez Cadena,’’ 30, no.1:180–211.

‘‘El problema de la nacion en las independencias americanas: Unapropuesta teorica’’ by Tomas Perez Vejo, 24, no. 2:221–244.

‘‘Emiliano Zapata and the Old Regime: Myth, Memory and Method,’’by William Schell, Jr., 25, no. 2:327–366.

‘‘Emilio Uranga, ideologo del lopezmateısmo,’’ by Guillermo Hurta-do and Florencia Niszt, 28, no. 2:307–326.

‘‘Enrique Pena Nieto’s National Anti-Corruption Commission andthe Challenges of Waging War against Corruption in Mexico,’’by Mathieu Tromme and Miguel Angel Lara Otaola, 30, no.2:557–588.

‘‘Ernesto de la Torre Villar, erudite, historiador y humanista, maestrogeneroso,’’ by Ana Carolina Ibarra, 25, no. 2:181–188.

‘‘Espectros en el archivo: Cementerio de papel de Fritz Glockner y elretorno del pasado reprimido al Palacio Negro de Lecumberri’’by Juan de Dios Vazquez, 29, no. 2:478–502.

‘‘Estrategias para mirar la nacion. El giro visual de los estudios cultur-ales mexicanos en lengua inglesa,’’ by Ignacio M. Sanchez Pra-do,’’ 27, no. 2:449–470.

‘‘The Evolution of History and the Informal Empire: La DecenaTragica in the British Press,’’ by Dennis R. Hidalgo, 23, no.2:317–354.

‘‘Exile and the Other in Two Short Stories by Elena Garro,’’ by TeresaM. Hurley, 21, no. 1:213–229.

‘‘Feminismo, traduccion cultural y traicion en Malinche de LauraEsquivel,’’ by Ricardo F. Vivancos Perez, 26, no. 1:111–127.

‘‘Formas de expresion de las ideas polıticas en el mundo hispanico,siglos XVI y XVII,’’ by Clara Ramırez, 26, no. 2:163–180.

‘‘Fracturas linguısticas: Los estridentistas,’’ by Claudia Parodı, 22, no.2:311–360.

Contributions by Title 663

Page 16: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

‘‘From Conquest to Colonization: Indios and Colonization Policiesafter Mexican Independence,’’ by Jose Angel Hernandez, 26, no.2:291–322.

‘‘From Sex Strangler to Model Citizen: Mexico’s Most Famous Mur-derer and the Defeat of the Death Penalty,’’ by Everard Meade, 26,no. 2:323–378.

‘‘From Spain to New Spain: Revisiting the Potestas Populi in HispanicPolitical Thought’’ by Monica Quijada, 24, no. 2:185–220.

‘‘From the Screen to the Wall: Siqueiros and Eisenstein in Mexico,’’ byJuan Carlos Arias Herrera, 30, no. 2:421–445.

‘‘From Travelogues to Political Intervention in Juliet Barrett Rublee’sFlame of Mexico,’’ by Isabel Arredondo, 26, no. 1:79–93.

‘‘Frozen Negotiations: The Peace Process in Chiapas,’’ by Raul BenıtezManaut, Andrew Selee and Cynthia J. Arnson, 22, no. 1:131–151.

‘‘The Gamble: Circular Mexican Migration and the Return on Remit-tances’’ by Susan Rose and Robert Shaw,’’ 24, no. 1:79–111.

‘‘Gender and Honor in Mexican History: Liberalism and Revolution inNineteenth and Twentieth-Century Mexico,’’ by Nichole Sanders,27, no. 1: 207–223.

‘‘Gender and Poetry Writing in the Light of Mexico’s Liberal Victory,1867 – ca. 1890,’’ by Stuart Easterling, 27, no. 1:97–142.

‘‘The Geography of Undocumented Mexican Migration,’’ by DouglasS. Massey, Jacob S. Rugh and Karen A. Pren, 26, no. 1:129–152.

‘‘¿Hay cadaver en la bodega? Re-letura (en tres partes) del indıgenamexicano en la obra de Alfonso Reyes,’’ by Tamara R. Williams,30, no. 1:150–179.

‘‘The Historical Dynamics of Mexico’s Groundwater Crisis in La Laguna:Knowledge, Resources and Profit, 1930s–1960s,’’ by Mikael Wolfe,29, no. 1:3–35.

‘‘Historical Paths to Mexican American Citizenship,’’ by Ana ElizabethRosas, 24, no. 1:147–167.

‘‘Historical Roots of Rural Migration: Land Reform, Corn Credit, andthe Displacement of Rural Farmers in Nayarit Mexico, 1900–1952,’’ by Veronica Castillo-Munoz, 29, no. 1:36–60.

‘‘Housekeeping, Development, and Culture in Porfirian Chihuahuaand Sonora,’’ by Marie Francois, 27, no. 2:281–324.

‘‘Imagining Mexico in 1921: Visions of the Revolutionary State andSociety in the Centennial Celebration in Mexico City,’’ by MichaelJ. Gonzales, 25, no. 2:247–270.

‘‘Immigrant Entrepreneurs, Bread, and Class Negotiation in Postrev-olutionary Mexico City,’’ by Robert Weis, 25, no. 1:71–100.

‘‘Immigrant Voting in Home-Country Elections: Potential Conse-quences of Extending the Franchise to Expatriate Mexicans

664 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 17: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Residing in the United States,’’ by Enrico A. Marcelli and Wayne A.Cornelius, 21, no. 2:429–460.

‘‘In the Name of Civilization and with a Bible in Their Hands:’’ Reli-gion and the 1846–48 Mexican-American War,’’ by Peter Guardi-no,’’ 30, no. 2:342–365.

‘‘In the Shadow of Oil: Francisco J. Mugica vs. Telephone Transna-tional Corporations in Cardenista, Mexico,’’ by Arturo, GrunsteinDickter, 21, no. 1:1–32.

‘‘Incendiary Legislation: Fire Risk and Protection in Porfirian Puebla,’’by Anna Rose Alexander, 29, no. 1:175–199.

‘‘Indigenous Attitudes and Ethnic Identity Construction in Mexico,’’by Todd Eisenstadt, 22, no. 1:107–129.

‘‘Influencia del orientalismo en la explicacion del origen del pueblo yruinas mayas: las tribus perdidas de Israel y el caso Waldeck,’’ byCarolina Depetris, 25, no. 2:227–246.

‘‘Integracion Tecnologica y Financiera de Pequenas y MedianasEmpresas: Hacia una Nueva Polıtica de Industrializacion enMexico,’’ by Andres Blancas Neria y Carlos Lopez–Gomez, 30, no.2:522–556.

‘‘La geografıa del caos: Un mapa de la escision revolucionaria (agosto-noviembre de 1914)’’ by Pedro Agustın Salmeron Sangines, 29,no. 2:366–396.

‘‘La historia encarnada, Llanto de Carmen Boullosa’’ by ElizabethCummins Munoz, 29, no. 2:459–477.

‘‘La historiografıa economica reciente sobre el Mexico deci-mononico,’’ by Sandra Kuntz Ficker, 21, no. 2:461–492.

‘‘La masculinidad marginada en la vanguardia post-Revolucionaria: ElCaso de ‘‘El Cafe de Nadie’’ de Arqueles Vela,’’ by Angela CeciliaEspinosa, 30, no. 2:397–420.

‘‘La modernidad contendida. Estado, comunidades rurales y capita-lismo en la posrevolucion,’’ by Francisco Javier Gomez Carpin-teiro, 21, no. 1:97–139.

‘‘La moneda menuda en la circulacion monetaria de la Ciudad deMexico, Siglo XVIII,’’ by Enriqueta Quiroz, 22, no. 2:219–250.

‘‘La prevencion frente al despotismo. El primer liberalismo en Nue-va Espana y Mexico, 1808–1834’’ by Mirian Galante, 24, no.2:421–453.

‘‘La psicosis del repatriado. De los campos agrıcolas en EstadosUnidos al Manicomio La Castaneda en la ciudad de Mexico,1920–1944,’’ by Andres Rıos Molina, 27, no. 2:361–384.

‘‘La Revista Mexicana de Literatura: territorio de la nueva eliteintelectual (1955–1965),’’ by Ricardo Pozas Horcasitas, 24, no.1:53–78.

Contributions by Title 665

Page 18: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

‘‘La voz fronteriza: Oscar Monroy and the Corrido Tradition alongthe US-Mexico Border,’’ by Andrew M. Gordus, 27, no. 2:385–406.

‘‘Las finanzas publicas de Mexico en el primer Imperio y la Republicafederal (1821–1835). Una revision historiografica,’’ by ErnestSanchez Santiro, 24, no. 2399–420.

‘‘Las primeras operaciones del Export-Import Bank en Mexico, 1935–1942,’’ by Isabel Avella Alaminos, 28, no. 1:133–162.

‘‘Laying a Ghost to Rest: Subcommander Marcos’ Playing of the Indig-enous Card,’’ by Nicholas Henck, 25, no. 1:155–170.

‘‘Legislative Oversight of the Armed Forces in Mexico’’ by Jordi Dıez,24, no. 1:113–145.

‘‘Los primeros proyectos constitucionales en Mexico y su influenciabritanica (1821–1836),’’ by Catherine Andrews, 27, no. 1:5–43.

‘‘Macehuales and the Corporate Solution: Colonial Secessions inNahua Central Mexico,’’ by Stephen M. Perkins, 21, no. 1:277–306.

‘‘Mas alla del mito: mujeres, tequila y nacion,’’ by Marie Sarita Gaytanand Ana G. Valenzuela Zapata, 28, no. 1:183–208.

‘‘The Mexican Intelligentsia, 1950–1968: Cosmopolitanism, NationalIdentity and the State,’’ by Deborah Cohn, 21, no. 1:141–182.

‘‘Mexican Nicodemus: The Apostleship of Refugio Padilla, Cristero,on the Islas Marıas,’’ by Matthew Butler, 25, no. 2:271–306.

‘‘Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos,’’ by Jaime EdmundoRodrıguez Ordonez, 30, no. 2:299–312.

‘‘Mexico’s Democratic Revolution, Where is it Leading?’’ by Roderic AiCamp, 25, no. 2:367–376.

‘‘Naturalizing Modernity: Urban Parks, Public Gardens and DrainageProjects in Porfirian Mexico City,’’ by Emily Wakild, 23, no. 1:101–123.

‘‘The Nature of Mexican Politics,’’ by Aaron W. Navarro, 29, no.2:522–542.

‘‘New Spain and the 1808 Crisis of the Spanish Monarchy,’’ by JaimeE. Rodrıguez O., 24, no. 2:245–288.

‘‘Notas sobre la territorialidad, sacralidad y economıa polıticabenniza/binigula’/beneshon,’’ by Stefano Varese, and MichaelGrofe, 23, no. 2:219–252.

‘‘Octavio Paz: An Intellectual and his Critics,’’ by Yvon Grenier, 21,no.1:251–267.

‘‘On Sacred Ground: The Church and Burial Rites in Nineteenth–Century Yucatan, Mexico,’’ by Heather L. McCrea, 23, no. 1:33–62.

‘‘On the Improbable Popularity of Friedrich Katz,’’ by Claudio Lom-nitz, 27, no. 1: 233–239.

666 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 19: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

‘‘The Organization of Hacienda Labor during the Mexican Revolu-tion: Evidence from Yucatan,’’ by Shannan Mattiace and TomasNonnenmacher, 30, no. 2:366–396.

‘‘Orıgenes federales del republicanismo en Mexico. 1810–1824,’’ byManuel Chust and Ivana Frasquet, 24, no. 2:363–398.

‘‘Out of the Plaza and into the Office: Social Movement Leaders in thePRD,’’ by S . _Ilgu Ozler, 25, no. 1:125–154.

‘‘Pas de deux: la mutua lectura de Octavio Paz y Robert Motherwell,’’by Aurora Camacho de Schmidt, 26, no. 1:95–110.

‘‘Paul J. Vanderwood-An Obituary and Remembrance,’’ by Eric VanYoung, 28, no. 1:1–20.

‘‘Perceptions and Attitudes about Corruption and Democracy in Mex-ico,’’ by John Bailey and Pablo Paras, 22, no. 1: 57–81.

‘‘Periodistas mexicanos: ¿voceros de la nueva Doctrina Monroe?’’ byAna Marıa Serna, 26, no. 2:207–238.

‘‘Pito Perez: Mexican Middleman,’’ by Robert S. Stone, 21, no. 2:369–402.

‘‘The Political Origins of Social Security in Mexico during theCardenas and Avila Camacho Administrations,’’ by Michelle Dion,21, no.1:59–95.

‘‘Por lealtad al rey, a la patria y a la religion.Los anos de transicion enla provincia de Zacatecas: 1808–1814,’’ by Mariana Teran Fuentes,24, no. 2:289–324.

‘‘Portraits of a Lady: Visions of Modernity in Porfirian Oaxaca City,’’ byMark Overmayer-Velazquez, 23, no. 1:63–100.

‘‘Radiotelegraphy to Broadcasting: Wireless Communications in Por-firian and Revolutionary Mexico, 1899–1924,’’ by J. Justin Castro,29, no. 2:335–365.

‘‘Reassessing the Rise of Mexico’s Virgin of Guadalupe, 1650s—1780s,’’ by Cornelius Conover, 27, no. 2:251–280.

‘‘Rebelion y patrones de resistencia indıgena en las Fronteras de SanLuis Colotlan, Nueva Espana, siglos XVI-XVIII,’’ by Carlos RubenRuiz Medrano, 29, no. 1:200–237.

‘‘Recent Research on the Legal History of Modern Mexico,’’ by Peter L.Reich, 23, no. 1:181–193.

‘‘Reform before La Reforma: Liberals, Conservatives and the Debateover Immigration, 1846–1855,’’ by David K. Burden, 23, no.2:283–316.

‘‘Rethinking the Meaning of Citizenship in Post-PRI Mexico: Canthe State Change its Image?’’ by Katsuo A. Nishikawa, 28, no.1:21–42.

‘‘Rewriting Zapata: Generational Conflict on the Eve of the MexicanRevolution,’’ by Patrick J. McNamara, 30, no. 1:122–149.

Contributions by Title 667

Page 20: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

‘‘The Role of Financial Derivative Instruments in the Emerging Mar-ket Financial Crises of the Late 1990s: The Mexican Case,’’ by AycaSarialioglu Hayali, 30, no. 2:479–521.

‘‘Royalist Scourge or Liberator of the Patria? Agustın de Iturbide andMexico’s War of Independence, 1810–1821,’’ by Christon I.Archer, 24, no. 2:325–362.

‘‘Rural Teachers and State Facades in Guerrero, 1930–1950,’’ by PaulGillingham, 22, no. 2:331–360.

‘‘Sacrifice and Recognition in Carlos Reygadas’s Japon,’’ by Craig Ep-plin, 28, no. 2:287–306.

‘‘Self-Management of Irrigation Systens, a Typology: The MexicanCase,’’ by Jacinta Palerm-Viqueira, 22, no. 2: 361–186.

‘‘Silent Idylls, Double Lives: Sex and the City in Salvador Novo’s Laestatua de sal,’’ by Brian Gollnick, 21, no. 1:231–250.

‘‘Sistema electoral y elites regionales: Elecciones municipales y dediputados en Cuernavaca y Cuautla de Amilpas, 1812–1835,’’by Irving Reynoso Jaime, 25, no. 2:189–226.

‘‘Sistema financiero, banca privada y credito agrıcola en Mexico,1897–1913:¿Un desencuentro anunciado?’’ by Paolo Riguzzi,21, no. 2:333–367.

‘‘Social Class and Voter Preference in Recent Mexican Elections,’’ byDennis Gilbert, 28, no. 2:327–350.

‘‘Soldiers and Civilians: The War of Independence in Oaxaca, 1814–1815,’’ by Timo Schaefer, 29, no. 1:149–174.

‘‘State Building and Development: How Mexico’s Past Still Matters toits Present,’’ by Emily Acevedo, 29, no. 2:503–521.

‘‘State, Violence and Security in Mexico: Developments and Conse-quences for Democracy,’’ by Carlos Solar, 30, no. 1: 241–255.

‘‘The Subcommander and the Sardinian: Marcos and Gramsci,’’ byNicholas Henck, 29, no. 2:428–458.

‘‘Terrazguero Smallholders and the Function of Agricultural Tributein Sixteenth-Century Tepeaca, Mexico,’’ by Kenneth G. Hirth andAurelio Lopez Corral, 28, no. 1:73–93.

‘‘Time for (a Reading) Community? The Border Literary Field(s) inthe 1980s and 1990s,’’ by Paul Fallon, 25, no. 1:47–70.

‘‘Tlatelolco me bautizo: Literary Renewal and the Neoliberal Transi-tion,’’ by Samuel Steinberg, 28, no. 2:265–286.

‘‘Todos los jefes: Reflections on the Origins of UC MEXUS,’’ byKathryn Vincent Lepp, 30, no. 2:284–298.

‘‘Trade Openness, Infrastructure, and the Wellbeing of Mexico’sSouth,’’ by Marcela Gonzalez Rivas, 27, no. 2:407–430.

‘‘Transatlantic Fuentes: Between ‘‘The Two Shores’’ of Pluralism andGlossocentrism,’’ by Alberto Ribas, 27, no. 1:143–175.

668 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 21: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

‘‘Trials by Fire: National Political Lessons from Failed State Electionsin Post-revolutionary Mexico, 1920–25,’’ by Sarah Osten, 29, no.1:238–279.

‘‘US Migration to Mexico: Numbers, Issues, and Scenarios,’’ byMichael Topmiller, Frederick J. Conway, and James Gerber, 27,no. 1: 45–71.

‘‘Vicente Fox’s Presidential Style and the New Mexican Presidency,’’by Soledad Loaeza, 22, no. 1:1–32.

‘‘Violence, Governance, and Economic Development at the U.S.-Mex-ico Border: The Case of Nuevo Laredo and its Lessons,’’ by Fred-dy Marinez Navarro and Leonardo Vivas, 28, no. 2:377–416.

‘‘William Bullock and the Mexican Connection,’’ by Michael P. Cost-eloe, 22, no. 2:275–310.

‘‘Yucatec-Mayan Im/migration to the Mission and Edison Neighbor-hoods: A Comparison of Social Conditions and Im/migrantSatisfaction,’’ by David Piacenti, 28, no. 1:95–132.

‘‘Yucatecan-Mexican Relations and Yucatecan Politicking from 1829–1832: Centralism, Secession, and Federalism,’’ by Shara Ali, 30,no. 2:313–341.

Contributions by Title 669

Page 22: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Books Reviewed (By Author)

Aguilar Rivera, Jose Antonio, En pos de la quimera: reflexiones sobreel experimento constitucional atlantico, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Aguilar Rivera, Jose Antonio y Rafael Rojas, eds. El republicanismo enHispanoamerica. Ensayos de historia intelectual y polıtica, 22,no. 2:417–448.

Aguirre, Carlos A. and Robert M. Buffington, eds., ReconstructingCriminality in Latin America, 23, no. 1:181–193.

Aguirre, Carlos A., Richard D. Salvatore and Gilbert M. Joseph, eds.,Crime and Punishment in Latin America. Law and Society sinceLate Colonial Times, 23, no, 1:181–193.

Alamillo, Jose M., Making Lemonade out of Lemons: Mexican Amer-ican Labor and Leisure in a California Town, 1880–1960, 24,no. 1:147–167.

Archer, Christon I., editor, The Birth of Modern Mexico, 1780–1824,22. no, 2:417–448.

Avila, Alfredo, En nombre de la nacion. La formacion del gobiernorepresentativo en Mexico (1808–1824), 22, no. 2:417–448.

——, Para la libertad. Los republicanos en tiempos del imperio,1821–1823, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Beezley, William H., and Colin M. MacLachlan, Mexico’s Crucial Cen-tury, 1810–1910: An Introduction, 29, no. 2:503–521.

Berruecos, Susana and George Philip eds. Mexico’s Struggle for Pub-lic Security: Organized Crime and State Responses, 30, no.1:241–255.

Blum, Ann S., Domestic Economies: Family, Work, and Welfare inMexico City, 1884–1943, 27, no. 2:207–223.

Bortz, Jeffrey L. and Stephen Habor, eds., The Mexicon Economy,1870–1930. Essays on the Economic History of Institutions, Rev-olution, and Growth, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Brading, David A., Octavio Paz y la poetica de la historia mexicana,21, no. 1:251–267.

Bruhn, Kathleen, Urban Protest in Mexico and Brazil, 25, no.2:367–376.

Buchenau, Jurgen, Tools of Progress: A German Family in MexicoCity, 1865-Present, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Buffington, Robert M., and Carlos A. Aguirre, eds., ReconstructingCriminality in Latin America, 23, no. 1:181–193.

Buffington, Robert M., Criminal and Citizen in Modern Mexico, 23,no. 1:181–193.

670

Page 23: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Camp, Roderic Ai, editor, The Oxford Handbook of Mexican Politics,by Aaron W. Navarro, 29, no. 2:522–542.

Campbell, Bruce, ¡Viva la historieta! Mexican Comics, NAFTA andthe Politics of Globalization, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Cano, Gabriela, Se Llamaba Elena Arizmendi, 27, no. 1:207–223.Cardenas, Enrique, Cuando se origino el atraso economico de

Mexico. La economıa mexicana en el largo siglo XIX, 1780–1920, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Cardenas, Enrique, Cuando se origino el atraso economico deMexico. La economıa mexicana en el largo siglo XIX, 1780–1920, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Chust, Manuel e Ivana Frasquet. La trascendencia del liberalismodoceanista en Espana y en America, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Chust Manuel and Victor Mingues, eds., El imperio sublevado: mon-arquıa y naciones en Espana e Hispanoamerica, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Colbert Cairns, Emily, review of El sentido oculto de las palabras enlos testimonios inquisitoriales de las Riviera: judaizantes de laNueva Espana, by Silvia Hamui Sutton, 27, no. 2:478–480.

Connaughton, Brian, editor, Religion, polıtica e identidad en la In-dependencia de Mexico, 28, no. 2:417–419

——, Entre la voz de Dios y el llamado de la patria. Religion, iden-tidad y ciudadanıa en Mexico, siglo XIX, 30, no. 2:589–601.

Corchado, Alfredo, Midnight in Mexico: A Reporter’s Journeythrough A Country’s Decent into Darkness, 30, no. 1:265–267.

Cordova, James M. The Art of Professing in Bourbon Mexico:Crowned-Nun Portraits and Reform in the Convent, 30, no.2:602–605.

Crandall, Russell, Guadalupe Paz, and Riordan Roett, eds., Mexico’sDemocracy at Work, Political and Economic Dynamics, 25,no.2:367–376.

Di Stefano, Roberto, El pulpito y la plaza. Clero, sociedad ypolıtica de la monarquıa catolica a la republica rosista, 30,no. 2:589–601.

Dıez, Jordi, Canadian and Mexican Security in the New North Amer-ica, Challenges and Prospects, 25, no.2:367–376.

Eastman, Scott, Preaching Spanish Nationalism across the HispanicAtlantic, 1759–1823, 30, no. 2:589–601.

Favila, Cesar D. review of The Art of Professing in Bourbon Mexico:Crowned-Nun Portraits and Reform in the Convent, by James M.Cordova, 30, no. 2:602–605.

Forment, Carlos A., Democracy in Latin America 1760–1900, 22, no.2:417–448.

Books Reviewed (By Author) 671

Page 24: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Frasquet, Ivana, e Manuel Chust, La trascendencia del liberalismodoceanista en Espana y en America, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Gabara, Esther, Errant Modernism. The Ethos of Photography inMexico and Brazil, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Garcia, Matt, A World of Its Own: Race, Labor, and Citrus in theMaking of Greater Los Angeles, 1900–1970, 24, no. 1:147–167.

Gonzalez Torres, Armando, Las Guerras Culturales de Octavio Paz,21, no. 1:251–267.

Gordillo, Luz Marıa, Mexican Women and the Other Side of Immi-gration. Engendering Transnational Ties, 27, no. 2:474–477.

Grayson, George W., Mexican Messiah, Andres Manuel Lopez Obra-dor, 25, no. 2:367–376.

Guedea, Virginia, review of Por lealtad al rey, a la patria y a lareligion Zacatecas (1808–1814), by Mariana Teran Fuentes, 30,no. 2:605–612.

Gutierrez, Laura, Performing Mexicanidad. Vendidas y Cabareterason the Transnational State, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Haber, Stephen, Armando Razo and Noel Maurer, The Politicsof Property Rights. Political Instability, Credible Commit-ments, and Economic Growth in Mexico, 1876–1929, 21, no.2:461–492.

Haber, Stephen and Jeffrey L. Bortz, editors, The Mexican Economy,1870–1930. Essays on the Economic History of Institutions, Rev-olution, and Growth, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Hamilton, Nora, Mexico: Political Social and Economic Evolution,29, no. 2:503–521.

Hamui Sutton, Silvia, El sentido oculto de las palabras en los testi-monios inquisitoriales de las Riviera: judaizantes de la NuevaEspana, 27, no. 2:478–480.

Hart, John Mason, Empire and Revolution. The Americans in Mexicosince the Civil War, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Hershfield, Joanne, Imagining la Chica Moderna. Women, Nationand Visual Culture in Mexico, 1917–1936, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Holzner, Claudio A., Poverty of Democracy: The Institutional Rootsof Political Participation in Mexico, 29, no. 2:503–521.

Indych-Lopez, Anna, Muralism without Walls. Rivera, Orozco andSiqueiros in the United States, 1927–1940, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Ingwersen, Lance, review of Religion, polıtica e identidad en laIndependencia de Mexico by Brian Connaughton, editor, 28,no. 2:417–419.

Jaffee, Samuel, review of Without History: Subaltern Studies, theZapatista Insurgency, and the Specter of History, by Jose Rabasa,27, no. 2:471–473.

672 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 25: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Joseph, Gilbert M., Carlos A. Aguirre and Richard D. Salvatore eds.,Crime and Punishment in Latin America. Law and Society sinceLate Colonial Times, 23, no. 1:181–193.

Kenny, Paul, Monica Serrano with Arturo Sotomayor, eds. Mexico’s Secu-rity Failure, Collapse into Criminal Violence, 30, no. 1:241–255.

Legnani, Nicole, review of The Spectacular City, Mexico, and Colo-nial Hispanic Literary Culture, by Stephanie Merrim, 28, no.2:209–211.

Lipsett-Rivera, Sonya, Gender and the Negotiation of Daily Life inMexico, 1750–1856, 29, no. 2:545–548.

Lopez, Rick, Crafting Mexico. Intellectuals, Artisans, and the Stateafter the Revolution, 27, no. 2:449–469.

MacLachlan, Colin M. and William H. Beezley. Mexico’s Crucial Cen-tury, 1810–1910: An Introduction, 29, no. 2:503–521.

Mauer, Noel, Stephen Haber, and Armando Razo, The Politics ofProperty Rights. Political Instability, Credible Commitments,and Economic Growth in Mexico, 1876–1929, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Maurer, Noel, The Power and the Money. The Mexican FinancialSystem, 1876–1932, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Merrim, Stephanie, The Spectacular City, Mexico, and Colonial His-panic Literary Culture, 28, no. 2:209–211.

Mila, Brandon H., review of Mexico and Mexicans in the Making ofthe United States, John Tutino, editor, 29, no. 2:543–545.

Mingues, Victor y Manuel Chust, El imperio sublevado: monarquıa ynaciones en Espana e Hispanoamerica, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Mraz, John, Looking for Mexico. Modern Visual Culture andNational Identity, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Navarro, Aaron W., review of The Oxford Handbook of Mexican Pol-itics, by Roderic Ai Camp, editor, 29, no. 2:522–542.

Ngai, Mae M., Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making ofModern America, 24, no. 1:147–167.

Nieto Camacho, Ana Lilia, review of Las relaciones Mexico-EstadosUnidos, 1759–1020, 30, no. 1:256–262.

Noble, Andrea, Photography and Memory in Mexico. Icons of Revo-lution, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Olcott, Jocelyn, Revolutionary Women in Postrevolutionary Mexico,25, no.2:367–376.

Olsen, Patrice Elizabeth, Artifacts of Revolution. Architecture, Soci-ety and Politics in Mexico City 1920–1940, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Pansters, Will G., ed. Violence, Coercion, and State-Making inTwentieth-Century Mexico, 30, no. 1:241–255.

Books Reviewed (By Author) 673

Page 26: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Paz, Guadalupe, Russell Crandall and Riordan Roett, eds., Mexico’sDemocracy at Work, Political and Economic Dynamics, 25,no.2:367–376.

Penyak, Lee M., review of Gender and the Negotiation of Daily Life inMexico, 1750–1856, by Sonya Lipsett-Rivera, 29, no. 2:545–548.

Philip, George and Susana Berruecos, eds. Mexico’s Struggle for Pub-lic Security: Organized Crime and State Responses, 30, no.1:241–255.

Piccato, Pablo, City of Suspects. Crime in Mexico City, 1900–1931, 23,no. 1:181–193.

——, The Tyranny of Opinion: Honor in the Construction of theMexican Public Sphere, 27, no. 1:207–223.

Pick, Zuzana M., Constructing the Image of the Mexican Revolution,27, no. 2:449–469.

Proctor III, Frank T., Damned Notions of Liberty: Slavery, Culture,and Power in Colonial Mexico, 1640–1769, 28, no. 2:420–422.

Rabasa, Jose, Without History: Subaltern Studies, the ZapatistaInsurgency, and the Specter of History, 27, no. 2:471–473.

Razo, Armando, Noel Maurer and Stephen Habor, The Politics ofProperty Rights. Political Instability, Credible Commitments,and Economic Growth in Mexico, 1876–1929, 21, no. 2: 461–492.

Ricaurte Quijano, Paola, Mexican Women and the Other Side ofImmigration. Engendering Transnational Ties, by Luz MarıaGordillo, 27, no. 2:474–477.

Riguzzi, Paolo, ¿Reciprocidad imposible? La polıtica del comercioentre Mexico y Estados Unidos, 1857–1938, 21, no. 2: 461–492.

Rodrıguez Narvaez, Roberto, Review of Diario de Angel Calderon dela Barca, primer ministro de Espana en Mexico. Miguel Soto,editor, 30, no. 1:262–265.

Rodrıguez O., Jaime E., The Divine Charter: Constitutionalism andLiberalism in Nineteenth-Century Mexico, 22, no. 2:417–448.

——, ‘‘We Are Now the True Spaniards’’: Sovereignty, RevolutionIndependence, and the Emergence of the Federal Republic ofMexico, 1808–1824, 30, no. 2:613–616.

Roett, Riordan, Russell Crandall and Guadalupe Paz, eds., Mexico’sDemocracy at Work, Political and Economic Dynamics, 25, no.2:367–376.

Rojas, Rafael, La escritura de la independencia. El surgimiento de laopinion publica en Mexico, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Rojas, Rafael, y Jose Antonio Aguilar, eds. El republicanismo en His-panoamerica. Ensayos de historia intelectual y polıtica, 22, no.2:417–448.

674 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 27: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Rugeley, Terry, review of ‘‘We Are Now the True Spaniards’’: Sover-eignty, Revolution, Independence, and the Emergence of theFederal Republic of Mexico 1808–1824, by Jaime E. RodrıguezO., 30, no. 2:613–616.

Ruiz, Eduardo, review of Damned Notions of Liberty: Slavery, Cul-ture, and Power in Colonial Mexico, 1640–1769, by Frank T.Proctor III, 28, no. 2:420–422.

Salazkina, Masha, In Excess. Sergei Eisenstein’s Mexico, 27, no.2:449–469.

Salvatore, Ricardo D., Carlos A. Aguirre and Gilbert M. Joseph, eds.,Crime and Punishment in Latin America. Law and Society sinceLate Colonial Times, 23, no. 1:181–193.

Schell, William, Jr., Integral Outsiders. The American Colony in Mex-ico City, 1876–1911, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Segre, Erica, Intersected Identities. Strategies of Visualization inNineteenth and Twentieth Century Mexican Culture, 27, no.2:449–469.

Serrano, Monica, Paul Kenny, with Arturo Sotomayor, eds. Mexico’sSecurity Failure, Collapse into Criminal Violence, 30, no. 1:241–255.

Sloan, Kathryn, Runaway Daughters: Seduction, Elopement, andHonor in Nineteenth-Century Mexico, 27, no. 1:207–223.

Smith, Stephanie, Gender and the Mexican Revolution: YucatanWomen and the Realities of Patriarchy, 27, no. 1:207–223.

Soto, Miguel, editor, Diario de Angel Calderon de la Barca, primerministro de Espana en Mexico, 30, no. 1:262–265.

Sotomayor,Arturo,PaulKenny,withMonica Serrano,eds.Mexico’s Secu-rity Failure, Collapse into Criminal Violence, 30, no. 1:241–255.

Speckman, Elisa, Crimen y Castigo. Legislacion penal, interpreta-ciones de la criminalidad y administracion de justicia (Ciudadde Mexico, 1872–1910), 23, no. 1:181–193.

Stavans, Ilan, Octavio Paz, A Meditation, 21, no. 1:251–267.Tejada, Roberto, National Camera. Photography and Mexico’s

Image Environment, 27, no. 2:449–469.Teran Fuentes, Mariana, Por lealtad al rey, a la patria y a la religion

Zacatecas (1808–1814), 30, no. 2:605–612.Terrazas y Basante, Marcela, coord. Las relaciones Mexico-Estados

Unidos, 1759–1020, 30, no. 1:256–262.Tierney, Dolores, Emilio Fernandez. Pictures in the Margins, 27, no.

2:449–469.Tomlinson, Charles, Foreword, Octavio Paz, Itinerary, An Intellec-

tual Journey. Translated by Jason Wilson. Afterword by JasonWilson, 21, no. 1:251–267.

Books Reviewed (By Author) 675

Page 28: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Tutino, John, editor, Mexico and Mexicans in the Making of theUnited States’’, 29, no. 2:543–545.

Urıas Horcasitas, Beatriz, Indıgena y Criminal. Interpretacionesdel derecho y la antropologıa en Mexico, 1871–1921, 23, no.1:181–193.

Vargas, Zaragosa, Labor Rights are Civil Rights: Mexican AmericansWorkers in Twentieth Century America, 24, no. 1:147–167.

Velasco, Jesus Guillermo, review of Midnight in Mexico: A Reporter’sJourney through A Country’s Decent into Darkness by AlfredoCorchado, 30, no. 1:265–267.

Watt, Peter and Roberto Zepeda, Drug War Mexico: Politics, Neo-liberalism and Violence in the New Narcoeconomy, 30, no.1:241–255.

Weiner, Richard, Race, Nation and Market. Economic Culture inPorfirian Mexico, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Wilson, Jason, Translator, Octavio Paz, Itinerary, An IntellectualJourney. Foreword by Charles Tomlinson and afterword by JasonWilson, 21, no. 1:251–267.

Wuhs, Steven T., Savage Democracy, Institutional Change and PartyDevelopment in Mexico, 25, no.2:367–376

Zepeda, Roberto and Peter Watt, Drug War Mexico: Politics, Neo-liberalism and Violence in the New Narcoeconomy, 30, no.1:241–255.

676 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 29: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Books Reviewed (by Title)

A World of Its Own: Race, Labor, and Citrus in the Making of GreaterLos Angeles, 1900–1970, by Matt Garcia, 24, no. 1:147–167.

The Art of Professing in Bourbon Mexico: Crowned-Nun Portraitsand Reform in the Convent, by James M. Cordova, 30, no.2:602–605.

Artifacts of Revolution. Architecture, Society and Politics in MexicoCity 1920–1940, by Patrice Elizabeth Olsen, 27, no. 2:449–469.

The Birth of Modern Mexico, 1780–1824. Edited by Christon I.Archer, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Canadian and Mexican Security in the New North America, Chal-lenges and Prospects, by Jordi Dıez, 25, no.2:367–376.

City of Suspects: Crime in Mexico City, 1900–1931, by Pablo Piccato,23, no. 1:181–193.

Constructing the Image of the Mexican Revolution, by Zuzana M.Pick, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Crafting Mexico. Intellectuals, Artisans, and the State after theRevolution, by Rick Lopez, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Crime and Punishment in Latin America. Law and Society since LateColonial Times, edited by Ricardo D. Salvatore, Carlos A. Aguirre,and Gilbert M. Joseph, 23, no. 1:181–193.

Crimen y Castigo. Legislacion penal, interpretaciones de la crimi-nalidad y administracion de justicia (Ciudad de Mexico, 1872–1910), by Elisa Speckman, 23, no. 1:181–193.

Criminal and Citizen in Modern Mexico, by Robert M. Buffington,23, no. 1:181–193.

Cuando se origino el atraso economico de Mexico. La economıa mex-icana en el largo siglo XIX, 1780–1920, by Enrique Cardenas, 21,no. 2:461–492.

Cuando se origino el atraso economico de Mexico. La economıamexicana en el largo siglo XIX, 1780–1920, by EnriqueCardenas, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Damned Notions of Liberty: Slavery, Culture, and Power in ColonialMexico, 1640–1769, by Frank T. Proctor III., 28, no. 2:420–422.

Democracy in Latin America 1760–1900, by Carlos A. Forment, 22,no. 2:417–448.

Diario de Angel Calderon de la Barca, primer ministro de Espana enMexico, Miguel Soto, editor, 30, no. 1:262–265.

The Divine Charter: Constitutionalism and Liberalism inNineteenth-Century Mexico, by Jaime E. Rodrıguez O., 22, no.2:417–448.

677

Page 30: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Domestic Economies: Family, Work, and Welfare in Mexico City,1884–1943, by Ann S. Blum, 27, no. 1:207–223.

Drug War Mexico: Politics, Neoliberalism and Violence in the NewNarcoeconomy, by Peter Watt and Roberto Zepeda, 30, no.1:241–255.

El imperio sublevado: monarquıa y naciones en Espana e Hispa-noamerica. Edited by Victor Mingues and Manuel Chust, 22, no.2:417–448.

El pulpito y la plaza. Clero, sociedad y polıtica de la monarquıacatolica a la Republica rosista, by Roberto Di Stefano, 30, no.2:589–601.

El republicanismo en Hispanoamerica. Ensayos de historia intelec-tual y polıtica, Jose Antonio Aguilar Rivera y Rafael Rojas, eds.,22, no. 2:417–448.

El sentido oculto de las palabras en los testimonios inquisitorialesde las Riviera: judaizantes de la Nueva Espana, by Silvia HamuiSutton, 27, no. 2:478–480.

Emilio Fernandez. Pictures in the Margins, by Dolores Tierney, 27,no. 2:449–469.

Empire and Revolution. The Americans in Mexico Since the CivilWar, by John Mason Hart, 21, no. 2:461–492.

En nombre de la nacion. La formacion del gobierno representativoen Mexico (1808–1824), by Alfredo Avila, 22, no. 2:417–448.

En pos de la quimera: reflexiones sobre el experimento constitucio-nal atlantico, by Jose Antonio Aguilar Rivera, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Entre la voz de Dios y el llamado de la patria. Religion, identidad yciudadanıa en Mexico, siglo XIX, by Brian Connaughton, 30, no.2:589–601.

Errant Modernism. The Ethos of Photography in Mexico and Brazil,by Esther Gabara, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Gender and the Mexican Revolution: Yucatan Women and the Real-ities of Patriarchy, by Stephanie Smith, 27, no. 1:207–223.

Gender and the Negotiation of Daily Life in Mexico, 1750–1856, bySonya Lipsett-Rivera, 29, no. 2:545–548.

Imagining la Chica Moderna. Women, Nation and Visual Culture inMexico, 1917–1936, by Joanne Hershfield, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern Amer-ica, by Mae M. Ngai, 24, no. 1:147–167.

In Excess. Sergei Eisenstein’s Mexico, by Masha Salazkina, 27, no.2:449–469.

Indıgena y Criminal. Interpretaciones del derecho y la antropologıaen Mexico, 1871–1921, by Beatriz Urıas Horcasitas, 23, no.1:181–193.

678 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 31: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Integral Outsiders. The American Colony in Mexico City, 1876–1911,by William Schell Jr., 21, no. 2:461–492.

Intersected Identities. Strategies of Visualization in Nineteenth andTwentieth Century Mexican Culture, by Erica Segre, 27, no.2:449–469.

La escritura de la independencia. El surgimiento de la opinionpublica en Mexico, by Rafael Rojas, 22, no. 2:417–448.

La trascendencia del liberalismo doceanista en Espana y enAmerica Edited by Manuel Chust e Ivana Frasquet, 22, no.2:417–448.

Labor Rights are Civil Rights: Mexican Americans Workers in Twen-tieth Century America, by Zaragosa Vargas, 24, no. 1:147–167.

Las Guerras Culturales de Octavio Paz, by Armando GonzalezTorres, 21, no. 1:251–267.

Las relaciones Mexico-Estados Unidos, 1759–1020, Resena sobreMarcela Terrazas y Basante, coord. 30, no. 1:256–262.

Looking for Mexico. Modern Visual Culture and National Identity,by John Mraz, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Making Lemonade out of Lemons: Mexican American Labor andLeisure in a California Town, 1880–1960, by Jose M. Alamillo,24, no. 1:147–167.

The Mexicon Economy, 1870–1930. Essays on the Economic Historyof Institutions, Revolution, and Growth. Edited by Jeffrey L.Bortz and Stephen Haber, 21, no. 2: 461–492.

Mexican Messiah, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, by George W.Grayson, 25, no.2:367–376.

Mexican Women and the Other Side of Immigration. EngenderingTransnational Ties, by Luz Marıa Gordillo, 27, no. 2:474–477.

Mexico and Mexicans in the Making of the United States by JohnTutino, editor, 29, no. 2:543–545.

Mexico: Political Social and Economic Evolution, by Nora Hamilton,29, no. 2:503–521.

Mexico’s Democracy at Work, Political and Economic Dynamics,edited by Russell Crandall, Guadalupe Paz, and Riordan Roett,25, no.2:367–376.

Mexico’s Security Failure, Collapse into Criminal Violence, PaulKenny, Monica Serrano, with Arturo Sotomayor, editors, 30,no. 1:241–255.

Mexico’s Crucial Century, 1810–1910: An Introduction, by Colin M.MacLachlan and William H. Beezley, 29, no. 2:503–521.

Mexico’s Struggle for Public Security: Organized Crime and StateResponses, George Philip and Susana Berruecos, eds. 30, no.1:241–255.

Books Reviewed (by Title) 679

Page 32: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Midnight in Mexico: A Reporter’s Journey through A Country’sDecent into Darkness by Alfredo Corchado, 30, no. 1:265–267.

Muralism without Walls. Rivera, Orozco and Siqueiros in the UnitedStates, 1927–1940, by Anna Indych-Lopez, 27, no. 2:449–469.

National Camera. Photography and Mexico’s Image Environment,by Roberto Tejada, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Octavio Paz y la poetica de la historia mexicana, by David A. Brad-ing, 21, no. 1:251–267.

Octavio Paz, A Meditation, by Ilan Stavans, 21, no. 1:251–267.Octavio Paz, Itinerary, An Intellectual Journey, translated by Jason

Wilson, foreword by Charles Tomlinson and afterword by JasonWilson, 21, no. 1:251–267.

The Oxford Handbook of Mexican Politics, by Roderic Ai Camp,editor, 29, no. 2:522–542

Para la libertad. Los republicanos en tiempos del imperio, 1821–182, by Alfredo Avila, 22, no. 2:417–448.

Performing Mexicanidad. Vendidas y Cabareteras on the Transna-tional State, by Laura Gutierrez, 27, no. 2:449–469.

Photography and Memory in Mexico. Icons of Revolution, by AndreaNoble, 27, no. 2:449–469.

The Politics of Property Rights. Political Instability, Credible Com-mitments, and Economic Growth in Mexico, 1876–1929, byStephen Haber, Armando Razo and Noel Maurer, 21, no.2:461–492.

Por lealtad al rey, a la patria y a la religion Zacatecas (1808–1814),by Mariana Teran Fuentes, 30, no. 2:605–612.

Poverty of Democracy: The Institutional Roots of Political Partici-pation in Mexico, by Claudio A. Holzner, 29, no. 2:503–521.

The Power and the Money. The Mexican Financial System, 1876–1932, by Noel Maurer, 21, no. 2:461–492.

Preaching Spanish Nationalism across the Hispanic Atlantic 1759–1823, by Scott Eastman, 30, no. 2:589–601.

Race, Nation and Market. Economic Culture in Porfirian Mexico, byRichard Weiner, 21, no. 2:461–492.

¿Reciprocidad imposible? La polıtica del comercio entre Mexico yEstados Unidos, 1857–1938,’’ by Paolo Riguzzi, 21, no. 2: 461–492.

Reconstructing Criminality in Latin America, edited by Carlos A.Aguirre and Robert M. Buffington, 23, no. 1:181–193

Religion, polıtica e identidad en la Independencia de Mexico, byBrian Connaughton, editor, 28, no. 2:417–419

Revolutionary Women in Postrevolutionary Mexico, by JocelynOlcott, 25, no.2:367–376.

680 Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos

Page 33: Contributions by AuthorDel Valle Pav´on, Guillermina, ‘‘Comercializaci ´on de cacao de Guaya-quil por los mercaderes del Consulado de M´exico en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII,’’

Runaway Daughters: Seduction, Elopement, and Honor inNineteenth-Century Mexico, by Kathryn Sloan, 27, no. 1:207–223.

Savage Democracy, Institutional Change and Party Development inMexico, by Steven T. Wuhs, 25, no.2:367–376.

Se Llamaba Elena Arizmendi, by Gabriela Cano, 27, no. 1:07–223.The Spectacular City, Mexico, and Colonial Hispanic Literary Cul-

ture, by Stephanie Merrim, 28, no. 1:209–211.Tools of Progress: A German Family in Mexico City, 1865-Present, by

Jurgen Buchenau, 21, no. 2:461–492.The Tyranny of Opinion: Honor in the Construction of the Mexican

Public Sphere, by Pablo Piccato, 27, no. 1:207–223.Urban Protest in Mexico and Brazil, by Kathleen Bruhn, 25, no.

2:367–376.Violence, Coercion, and State-Making in Twentieth-Century Mexico,

Wil G. Pansters, editor. 30, no. 1:241–255.¡Viva la historieta! Mexican Comics, NAFTA and the Politics of Glob-

alization, by Bruce Campbell, 27, no. 2:449–469.‘‘We Are Now the True Spaniards’’: Sovereignty, Revolution, Indepen-

dence, and the Emergence of the Federal Republic of Mexico,1808–1824, by Jaime E. Rodrıguez O. 30, no. 2:613–616.

Without History: Subaltern Studies, the Zapatista Insurgency, andthe Specter of History, by Jose Rabasa, 27, no. 2:471–473.

Books Reviewed (by Title) 681