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Full-Text Articles in History

Projecting Pornography And Mapping Modernity In Mexico City, Ageeth Sluis Apr 2014

Projecting Pornography And Mapping Modernity In Mexico City, Ageeth Sluis

Ageeth Sluis

Drawing on Elizabeth Grosz’s and Doreen Massey’s insights that place and gender are mutually constitutive, this article examines the articulation among the embodied city, sexual desire, and changing gender norms in the wake of the Mexican Revolution. At this time, a newly governing revolutionary elite sought to reinvigorate and “civilize” Mexico City through a series of urban reforms and public works, partly in response to their concern over women in public as a social problem. By analyzing depictions of female nudity as conversant with urban landscapes in the banned magazine Vea, the author argues that pornography connected Mexico City to …


Bataclanismo! Or, How Deco Bodies Transformed Postrevolutionary Mexico City, Ageeth Sluis Apr 2014

Bataclanismo! Or, How Deco Bodies Transformed Postrevolutionary Mexico City, Ageeth Sluis

Ageeth Sluis

In the spring of 1925, Santa Anita's Festival of Flowers seemed to follow its tranquil trend of previous years. The large displays of flowers, the selection of indias bonitas (as the contestants of beauty pageants organized in an attempt to stimulate indigenism were known) and the boat-rides on the Viga Canal, all communicated what residents of neighboring Mexico City had come to expect of the small pueblo in the Federal District since the Porfiriato: the respite of a peaceful pastoral, the link to a colorful past, and the promise that mexicanidad was alive and well in the campo. Unfortunately, wrote …


"Heroes In These New Lands" Evolving Colonial Identities At The Spanish Royal Presidio Of Monterey, Jennifer A. Lucido Dec 2013

"Heroes In These New Lands" Evolving Colonial Identities At The Spanish Royal Presidio Of Monterey, Jennifer A. Lucido

Jennifer Lucido

New Spain’s northwestern province, Alta California was a frontier for the Spanish empire’s imperial enterprises during the late 18th and  early 19th centuries  (Burbank  and  Cooper 2010:  8, 126).  For the  diverse colonists of Alta California, however, it was a frontier in which social, cultural, and ethnic  identities  could  be  negotiated,  transformed,  and  reconstructed (Hackel 2010; Sahlins 1999: xii). This study  examines how Alta California served as a frontier of  new beginnings for the founding colonial soldiers, or  soldados  de  cuera,  and  settlers,  or  pobladores  (Pubols  2009:  19).  More specifically, this study investigates  those soldados  and pobladores  identified with  the  …