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The Mexican Heartland
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Table of Contents

Introduction Capitalism and Community, Autonomy and Patriarchy 1 I Silver Capitalism, 1500-1820 29 1 Empire, Capitalism, and the Silver Economies of Spanish America 31 2 Silver Capitalism and Indigenous Republics: Rebuilding Communities, 1500-1700 57 3 Communities Carrying Capitalism: Symbiotic Exploitations, 1700-1810 91 4 Communities Challenging Capitalism: Insurgency in the Mezquital, 1800-1815 119 5 Insurgencies and Empires: The Fall of Silver Capitalism, 1808-21 146 II Industrial Capitalism, 1820-1920 171 6 Mexico in the Age of Industrial Capitalism, 1810-1910 173 7 Anahuac Upside Down: Chalco and Iztacalco, 1820-45 211 8 Commercial Revival, Liberal Reform, and Community Resistance: Chalco, 1845-70 237 9 Carrying Capitalism into Revolution: Making Zapatista Communities, 1870-1920 261 10 Capitalism Constraining Revolution: Mexico in a World at War, 1910-2000 294 III National Capitalism And Globalization, 1920-2000 319 11 Mexico and the Struggle for National Capitalism, 1920-80 321 12 After Zapata: Communities Carrying National Capitalism, 1920-80 349 13 Building the Metropolis: Mexico City, 1940-2000 375 Epilogue After the Fall (of Autonomies): Globalization without Revolution 402 Acknowledgments 419 Appendix 423 Abbreviations used in Citations and Bibliography 433 Notes 434 Bibliography 469 Index 491

About the Author

John Tutino is professor of history and international affairs and director of the Americas Initiative at Georgetown University. His books include Making a New World: Founding Capitalism in the Bajio and Spanish North America and From Insurrection to Revolution in Mexico: Social Bases of Agrarian Violence, 1750-1940 (Princeton).

Reviews

"In this formidable work of scholarship, Georgetown University historian John Tutino recounts Mexico’s long journey to modernity from the standpoint of small communities surrounding Mexico City. This ambitious exercise spans five centuries to analyze how these communities ‘built, sustained, subsidized, resisted and changed capitalism’ in its various phases from silver-based imperial capitalism under Spanish rule to the shift from national capitalism to liberal globalism in the late 20th century."---José Ángel Gurria, Finance & Development

"This longue-durée Braudelian study of Mexico draws from compelling and fascinating regional and local studies. . . . Based on the author’s own original research as well as on broad scholarship from history, anthropology, sociology and political science in both English and Spanish that brings academic perspectives into dialogue beyond the conventional boundaries of disciplines and academic traditions."---Moramay López-Alonso, EH.net

"Combining economic and social history, Tutino explores the 500 year trajectory that saw central Mexico's transition from a major player in the world market even as the region remained largely autonomous from it to an economic afterthought buffeted by the hollowing out of the region by the neoliberal turn."---Andrae Marak, World History Connected

"What Tutino has done is remarkable, working up and down the scales of analysis from villages to the world market, from gender relations of households to imperial policy."---Jeremy Adelman, American Historical Review

"Tutino demonstrates the continued value and validity of an interpretation based on historical materialism. The book is an important contribution to the study of Mexico, globalization, and capitalism."---Robert W. Patch, Estudios Interdisciplinarios de América Latina y el Caribe

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