Desert Hawk Books |
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Criminal
and Citizen in Modern Mexico |
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320
pages |
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Criminal
and Citizen in Modern Mexico explores elite notions of crime
and criminality from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth
century. In Mexico these notions represented contested areas
of the social terrain, places where generalized ideas about criminality
transcended the individual criminal act to intersect with larger
issues of class, race, gender, and sexuality. It was at this
intersection that modern Mexican society bared its soul.
Attitudes toward race amalgamation and indios, lower-class
lifestyles and léperos, women and sexual deviance, all influenced
perceptions of criminality and ultimately determined the fundamental
issue of citizenship: who belonged and who did not. The liberal
discourse of toleration and human rights, the positivist discourse
of order and progress, the revolutionary discourse of social justice
and integration sought in turn to disguise the exclusions of modern
Mexican society behind a veil of criminality - to proscribe as criminal
those activities that criminologists, penologists, and anthropologists
clearly linked to marginalized social groups. This book attempts
to lift that veil and to gaze, like José Guadalupe Posada, at the
grinning calavera that it shields. Robert M. Buffington is an assistant professor of history at Bowling Green State University. |
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