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 Díaz and bound such progress to his vision of a modern order. Diana J. Montaño 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. Montaño 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.
The Challenge of Rural Electrification provides lessons from successful programs in Bangladesh, Chile, China, Costa Rica, Mexico, the Philippines, Thailand, and Tunisia, as well as Ireland and the United States.
The trend towards electrifying Mexico City's urban transport continued apace during the 1900s,72 although hydroelectricity began displacing coal by the decade's second half (see later). Other cities like Puebla, Guadalajara, ...
... 40-41 Music, 65-66 Museo Nacional de Artes e Industiras Populares, 118-19 Nacional, El, 56 Nicolet, A. J., 43-44 Nicolm, Manuel, 29 Nieto, Angel J., M.D., 50 Nogales, Sonora, 22 Novak, Michael, xiv Nuevo Leon, Mexico, 73 Oaxaca, ...
Directorio del comercio del Imperio Mexicano para el año de 1867. 1867. Reprint, Mexico City: Instituto Mora, ... Latin America, 1845–1914. Vol. ... Mexico City: Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes, 1993. Thompson, Wallace.
Midnight in Mexico is the story of one man’s quest to report the truth of his country—as he races to save his own life.
For a thorough discussion, see Diana Montaño, Electrifying Mexico: Cultural Understandings of a New Technology, 1880s–1960s (PhD diss., The University of Arizona, 2014). El País, 17 April 1900. Mario Barbosa, El trabajo en las calles: ...
Montaño, Diana J. Electrifying Mexico: Technology and the Transformation of a Modern City. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2021. Moya Gutiérrez, Arnaldo. Arquitectura, historia y poder bajo el régimen de Porfirio Díaz: Ciudad de ...
This collection examines how immigration law shapes immigrant illegality, the concept of immigrant illegality, and how its power is wielded and resisted.
“Guideposts in Buying Household Equipment,” Circular 207, College of Agriculture, University of Arizona Agricultural Extension Service, December 1952; Ross, “Every Home a Laboratory,” 15, 150, 185–87; Cohen, Consumers' Republic.
These include neighbors like Mexico. German Vergara, Fueling Mexico: Energy and Environment 1850–1950. Studies on Environment and History Series. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021; Diana Montano's Electrifying Mexico: ...