Patria Suave: an Analysis of Works on Mexican History for a General Audience Published During the Bicentennial Celebrations
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15848/hh.v0i17.776Keywords:
History of America, Historiography, MexicoAbstract
In 2010, Mexico organized an extensive series of public ceremonies, videos, songs and speeches on occasion of the Bicentennial celebration of its Independence and of the Centennial celebration of the Mexican Revolution. The aim of this article is to analyze in which ways certain works on Mexican History for general audience published during the celebrations represented the Mexican past with two central axes: the pre-Columbian period and the Mexican Revolution. Due to the profusion of discourses produced in the period, we focus our attention on the works with the largest print run aimed at the non-specialist audience, among all the works organized during the Bicentennial celebrations or as part of them.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Authors hold the copyrights to the manuscripts submitted. História da Historiografia: International Journal for Theory and History of Historiography is authorized to publish the aforementioned text. Authors are solely responsible for data, concepts and opinions presented in the papers, along with the accuracy of document and bibliographical references.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.