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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Political progress in Mexico since 1945

Gardner, Margaret Harper Marsh, 1929-, Gardner, Margaret Harper Marsh, 1929- January 1961 (has links)
No description available.
2

A comparison of community power methodologies: selected implications from rural northern Mexico

Keeler, John Budd, 1940- January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
3

The erasure of the Afro element of mestizaje in modern Mexico : the coding of visibly black mestizos according to a white aesthetic in and through the discourse on nation during the cultural phase of the Mexican Revolution, 1920-1968

Hernández Cuevas, Marco Polo 11 1900 (has links)
"The Erasure of the Essential Afro Element of Mestizaje in Modern Mexico: The Coding of Visibly Black Mestizos According to a White Aesthetic In and Through the Discourse on Nation During the Cultural Phase of the Mexican Revolution, 1920-1968" examines how the Afro elements of Mexican mestizaje were erased from the ideal image of the Mexican mestizo and how the Afro ethnic contributions were plagiarized in modern Mexico. It explores part of the discourse on nation in the narrative produced by authors who subscribed to the belief that only white was beautiful, between 1920 and 1968, during a period herein identified as the "cultural phase of the Mexican Revolution." It looks at the coding and distortion of the image of visibly black Mexicans in and through literature and film, and unveils how the Afro element "disappeared" from some of the most popular images, tastes in music, dance, song, food, and speech forms viewed as cultural texts that, by way of official intervention, were made "badges" of Mexican national identity. The premise of this study is that the criollo elite and their allies, through government, disenfranchised Mexicans as a whole by institutionalizing a magic mirror—materialized in the narrative of nation—where mestizos can "see" only a partial reflection of themselves. The black African characteristics of Mexican mestizaje were totally removed from the ideal image of "Mexican-ness"1 disseminated in and out of the country. During this period, and in the material selected for study, wherever Afro-Mexicans—visibly Afro or not—are mentioned, they appear as "mestizos" oblivious of their African heritage and willingly moving toward becoming white. The analysis adopts as critical foundation two essays: "Black Phobia and the White Aesthetic in Spanish American Literature," by Richard L. Jackson; and "Mass Visual Productions," by James Snead. In "Black Phobia..." Jackson explains that, to define "superior and inferior as well as the concept of beauty" according to how white a person is perceived to be, is a "tradition dramatized in Hispanic Literature from Lope de Rueda's Eufemia (1576) to the present" (467). For Snead, "the coding of blacks in film, as in the wider society, involves a history of images and signs associating black skin color with servile behavior and marginal status" (142).
4

The erasure of the Afro element of mestizaje in modern Mexico : the coding of visibly black mestizos according to a white aesthetic in and through the discourse on nation during the cultural phase of the Mexican Revolution, 1920-1968

Hernández Cuevas, Marco Polo 11 1900 (has links)
"The Erasure of the Essential Afro Element of Mestizaje in Modern Mexico: The Coding of Visibly Black Mestizos According to a White Aesthetic In and Through the Discourse on Nation During the Cultural Phase of the Mexican Revolution, 1920-1968" examines how the Afro elements of Mexican mestizaje were erased from the ideal image of the Mexican mestizo and how the Afro ethnic contributions were plagiarized in modern Mexico. It explores part of the discourse on nation in the narrative produced by authors who subscribed to the belief that only white was beautiful, between 1920 and 1968, during a period herein identified as the "cultural phase of the Mexican Revolution." It looks at the coding and distortion of the image of visibly black Mexicans in and through literature and film, and unveils how the Afro element "disappeared" from some of the most popular images, tastes in music, dance, song, food, and speech forms viewed as cultural texts that, by way of official intervention, were made "badges" of Mexican national identity. The premise of this study is that the criollo elite and their allies, through government, disenfranchised Mexicans as a whole by institutionalizing a magic mirror—materialized in the narrative of nation—where mestizos can "see" only a partial reflection of themselves. The black African characteristics of Mexican mestizaje were totally removed from the ideal image of "Mexican-ness"1 disseminated in and out of the country. During this period, and in the material selected for study, wherever Afro-Mexicans—visibly Afro or not—are mentioned, they appear as "mestizos" oblivious of their African heritage and willingly moving toward becoming white. The analysis adopts as critical foundation two essays: "Black Phobia and the White Aesthetic in Spanish American Literature," by Richard L. Jackson; and "Mass Visual Productions," by James Snead. In "Black Phobia..." Jackson explains that, to define "superior and inferior as well as the concept of beauty" according to how white a person is perceived to be, is a "tradition dramatized in Hispanic Literature from Lope de Rueda's Eufemia (1576) to the present" (467). For Snead, "the coding of blacks in film, as in the wider society, involves a history of images and signs associating black skin color with servile behavior and marginal status" (142). / Arts, Faculty of / French, Hispanic, and Italian Studies, Department of / Graduate
5

Challenges to regime legitimacy : a comparative study of Mexico and Peru

Bailly, Paula Beth. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
6

Challenges to regime legitimacy : a comparative study of Mexico and Peru

Bailly, Paula Beth. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
7

La vision de l'ambassade américaine des acteurs socio-politiques mexicains : 1947 à 1949

Jiménez Hanton, Amelia M. 24 April 2018 (has links)
Dans cette étude nous faisons une analyse de la vision qu'a l'ambassade américaine des principaux acteurs de la vie politique mexicaine durant les trois premières années du mandat de Miguel Alemán (1947 à 1949). Nos sources sont des rapports au State Department et la correspondance de l'ambassade avec d'autres institutions américaines. Cette voie nous permet d'expliquer l'importance pour l'ambassade des États-Unis de la dynamique entre certains acteurs clés mexicains peu après la fondation du PRI, et de vérifier, d'entrée de jeu, l'apport de sa vision relativement à l'historiographie de la période et à certaines interprétations sociologiques. Elle nous permet aussi de dégager le type d'influence "au jour le jour" de l'ambassade sur la politique étrangère de son pays. Enfin, et de manière secondaire, lors des événements au Mexique qui comportent une incidence sur les relations bilatérales entre les deux pays ou sur les relations des États-Unis avec l'Amérique latine, cette voie nous permet de déceler quel est le pouvoir de décision de cette institution. / Québec Université Laval, Bibliothèque 2013

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