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Electrifying Mexico – Technology and the Transformation of a Modern City

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Electrifying Mexico – Technology and the Transformation of a Modern City Synopsis

Winner, The Alfred B. Thomas Book Award, Southeastern Council of Latin American Studies (SECOLAS), 2022 Co-winner, Best Book in Non-North American Urban History, Urban History Association, 2022 Many visitors to Mexico City's 1886 Electricity Exposition were amazed by their experience of the event, which included magnetic devices, electronic printers, and a banquet of light. It was both technological spectacle and political messaging, for speeches at the event lauded President Porfirio Diaz and bound such progress to his vision of a modern order. Diana J. Montano explores the role of electricity in Mexico's economic and political evolution, as the coal-deficient country pioneered large-scale hydroelectricity and sought to face the world as a scientifically enlightened "empire of peace." She is especially concerned with electrification at the social level. Ordinary electricity users were also agents and sites of change. Montano documents inventions and adaptations that served local needs while fostering new ideas of time and space, body and self, the national and the foreign. Electricity also colored issues of gender, race, and class in ways specific to Mexico. Complicating historical discourses in which Latin Americans merely use technologies developed elsewhere, Electrifying Mexico emphasizes a particular national culture of scientific progress and its contributions to a uniquely Mexican modernist political subjectivity.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781477323458
Publication date: 14th September 2021
Author: Diana Montaño
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 392 pages
Genres: History of the Americas
Physics