The Mexican Transition: Politics, Culture, and Democracy in the Twenty-first Century

The Mexican Transition: Politics, Culture, and Democracy in the Twenty-first Century book cover

The Mexican Transition: Politics, Culture, and Democracy in the Twenty-first Century

Author(s): Roger Bartra (Author)

  • Publisher: University of Wales Press
  • Publication Date: 15 Jan. 2013
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 240 pages
  • ISBN-10: 070832553X
  • ISBN-13: 9780708325537

Book Description

This book is a collection of essays on the Mexican transition to democracy that offers reflections on different aspects of civic culture, the political process, electoral struggles, and critical junctures. They were written at different points in time and even though they have been corrected and adapted, they have kept the tension and fervour with which they were originally created. They provide the reader with a vision of what goes on behind those horrifying images that depict Mexico as a country plagued by narcotrafficking groups and subjected to unbridled homicidal violence. These images hide the complex political reality of the country and the accidents and shocks democracy has suffered

Editorial Reviews

Review

Roger Bartra is one of Mexico’s most important radical (and heterodox) intellectual figures. He has produced major works analysing the country’s agrarian and political structures, as well as an extraordinarily original history of the European ‘savage’ and, more recently, an anthropological approach to the study of the human brain. In ‘The Mexican Transition’, his latest collection of essays, Bartra redeploys many of the key ideas developed in these works to produce an invaluable analysis of Mexico’s contemporary political sphere as it emerges from decades of post-Revolutionary authoritarian rule. ‘The Mexican Transition’ is not only an original historical account of the emergence of new political agencies and democratic forms in a context beset by narco-violence and corruption, but also a trenchant critique of the various brands of neo-populism that inhibit true radical democratic reform in Mexico, as well as throughout Latin America as a whole. –Professor John Kraniauskas, Birkbeck, University of London

About the Author

Professor Roger Bartra is a Research Fellow at the University of Mexico (UNAM), an anthropologist and sociologist. He is the author of several books on the Mexican political system, the European mythology of melancholy and the wild men, and the anthropology of the brain.

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