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Mexico City through History and Culture

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Mexico City through History and Culture Synopsis

These essays celebrate Mexico City as a centre of cultural creativity, diversity, and dynamism, trace its history from the founding of the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan to the present day, and explore how the varied experiences of its inhabitants have been represented in poetry, film, and photography. Looking at the pre-Columbian city, colonial city, and modern city, contributors show how Mexico City has grown organically, largely developed by waves of immigrants with new ideas and aspirations. While they have often envisioned the city in new ways, they have been unable to escape totally its historical past, and indeed at times have positively embraced it to serve contemporary political ends. As the city has grown, what it symbolises to its inhabitants and how they experience the city has become fragmented by social class and ethnicity. There is not one Mexico City, but many. The volume explores how these varied experiences have been represented in poetry, film, and photography. Drawing from the fields of archaeology, history, political sociology, literature, cinema, and photography, this volume provides a unique insight into the history and culture of Mexico City.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780197264461
Publication date: 14th May 2009
Author: Linda A Professor of Geography, Department of Geography, Kings College London Fellow of the British Academy Newson
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 152 pages
Series: British Academy Occasional Papers
Genres: History of the Americas
Social and cultural history
Cultural studies