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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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
‘‘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
‘‘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
‘‘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
‘‘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
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
‘‘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
‘‘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
‘‘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
‘‘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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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