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An American Family in the Mexican Revolution

Herr, Richard(Edited by)Herr, Robert Woodmansee(Edited by)
Part of the Latin American Silhouettes series
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This memoir details the experiences of an American family caught in Revolutionary Mexico.

The book contains information about the Revolution, life as a foreign national in Mexico, the silver mining industry, and social and cultural aspects of Revolutionary Mexico.

Based on personal documents written by Richard Herr's older brother, the manuscript covers a critical period in Mexican history, beginning in the Porfiriato and continuing through the 1920s, from the point of view of one family.

An American Family in the Mexican Revolution illustrates the major themes in Mexican history, including the economic expansion of the United States into Mexico in the late nineteenth century; relations between foreign managers and Mexicans of all social classes; the foreign colony in Mexico; the development of a working class in Mexico; various aspects of the Mexican revolution (including its contribution to the debate about the degree to which foreigners and their enterprises stirred revolutionary discontent); the impact and changes brought about by the revolution; and Mexican-United States relations during the entire period.

The book also describes the story of U.S. miners in Mexico. The mineral industry was a critical part of U.S.-Mexican economic relations and the Mexican economy, yet little is known about its financing and operations.

An American Family in the Mexican Revolution is an excellent text for introducing students to primary sources.

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£107.00
Product Details
Rowman & Littlefield
0842027246 / 9780842027243
Hardback
01/08/1999
United States
263 pages
170 x 234 mm, 617 grams
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