Mexico : A 500-Year History
Mexico : A 500-Year History
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Author(s): Gillingham, Paul
ISBN No.: 9780802164841
Pages: 752
Year: 202511
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 49.00
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Praise for Mexico: A New York Times Book Review Editors'' Choice A Barnes and Noble Best History Book of 2025 A Washington Post Best Nonfiction Book of 2025 "Magisterial . This fine account does well to remind that the best history is about fact, not fiction."-- Peter Frankopan, The Telegraph "Lively, engaging . [Gillingham] shows that the country has thrived for centuries because of its diversity, not in spite of it."-- New York Times , "Six Books We Loved This Week" "The chaos of the Spanish conquest, the humiliation of military defeat to the United States, the disruption of the revolution . Mexican history is often viewed through the lens of trauma and violence. Yet, as Paul Gillingham outlines in a new book, Mexico: A History , this was also one of the earliest democracies in the world - one in which Indigenous peoples enjoyed rights unthinkable in the US at the time."-- History Extra "A breathtaking new book .


every one of [its] pages is worth reading . Gillingham writes with sparkling verve, and reveals Mexican history in all its kaleidoscopic complexity."-- Camilla Townsend, Washington Post , author of Fifth Sun: A New History of the Aztecs "An engrossing read . Enormous but enjoyable . Imposing at 700 pages, Gillingham''s book is nevertheless an engrossing read, from the droll cadences of its skeptical first line describing the embellished Spanish estimates of the Indigenous armies they encountered . On page after page, his narrative remains grounded in the smaller-scale experience of the communities that persisted under a power that has always been more spectacular than strong. At times, as Gillingham makes clear, democracy of the Mexican variety has outshined the American kind."-- Alvaro Enrigue, New York Times Book Review "A vibrant, thought-provoking account .


Mr. Gillingham offers valuable historical context . Throughout Mexico''s past, Mr. Gillingham writes, ''Mexicans and foreigners alike see corruption, rigged elections, violent bosses, dynasticism, dictatorship, and political turbulence as historical norms.'' Yet these scourges aren''t unique to Mexico, the author points out--they exist around the world, even in ''the countries that pride themselves on being the democracies par excellence.''"-- Wall Street Journal "Historian Paul Gillingham offers a new view of Mexico a national that has shaped the world, created an early democracy and forged a society that set the standard for legal rights that were ''unthinkable'' north of the border. Gillingham has published a new, wide-ranging account of Mexico''s past that argues the country''s story is too often reduced to conquest, defeat and revolution, and that its democratic and multicultural innovations deserve equal attention . The book presents a throughline that Mexico is at the center of global economic shifts, especially the way silver from New Spain fueled international trade and state power across continents.


Mexico''s role in world affairs, Gillingham argues, was not peripheral: it was integral to the early modern global economy and to the movement of people, capital, and political models."-- Texas Public Radio "[ Mexico ] centers the successes rather than the struggles of the land''s people while emphasizing their remarkable diversity . Gillingham forever calls attention to the ground-level experiences of the communities that compose Mexico because her judges the country to be the first on Earth where so many different groups--beginning with the land''s Indigenous people, Spanish settlers, and the many enslaved Africans and Asians who arrived during Spain''s rule--came together and created an enduring nation."-- The Week "Essential, lively reading for anyone wishing to understand Mexico and contemporary geopolitics alike. Superb history of a nation that deserves far more recognition on the international stage than it receives."-- Kirkus , starred review "Mexico contains multitudes, insists this vivid new history . With an eye for revealing details and a rejection of tired bromides, Gillingham describes a cultural melting pot that, despite hindrances, has succeeded better than some more powerful nations in living up to its ideals."-- Booklist "This is the history of a country at the center of the world, from the precarious beginnings of colonialism to the violent throes of democracy.


Gillingham has written a one-of-a-kind book, populated by large and small characters, spanning five hundred years of conflict and resilience, all in a masterful prose and a sharp, intelligent dialogue with the reader. The universality and uniqueness of this story makes us all Mexican."-- Pablo Piccato, author of A Brief History of Violence in Mexico , and Professor of History, Columbia University "A rollicking and stereotype-busting tour through five centuries of Mexican history. As Gillingham demonstrates, it''s Mexico--not the United States--that merits the title of the world''s earliest and greatest melting pot. Sweeping from the Sonoran copper mines to the rainforests of Chiapas to Mexico City''s mansions, Gillingham dissects the country''s politics, ideas, and contradictions with flair. The rare book that is as entertaining as it is learned and ingeniously argued."-- Deborah Cohen, author of Last Call at the Hotel Imperial and Director of the Roberta Buffett Institute for Global Affairs "The result of a long and erudite engagement with what Mexico has meant historically, Paul Gillingham''s book offers a unique and enlightening view of the five centuries that made Mexico. The local, the national, and the global meet, blending the big with the minute.


Wonderful storytelling, one of those rare happenstances of informing, explaining, and delighting."-- Mauricio Tenorio-Trillo, author of Latin America: The Allure and Power of an Idea and Professor of History, University of Chicago "In taking on half a millennium of Mexican history, Gillingham deftly maneuvers to convey both its ironies and complexities. It is a wild ride."-- Erika Pani, author of Torn Asunder: Republican Crises and Civil Wars in the United States and Mexico, 1848-1867 and Professor of History, El Colegio de México Praise for Unrevolutionary Mexico : Honorable Mention for the Howard F. Cline Book Prize in Mexican History, Sponsored by the Latin American Studies Association "Groundbreaking . Gillingham is tireless in his delivery of decades of research and interpretation--skip a page at the peril of missing something genuinely important . Written clearly and argued compellingly."-- Sarah Osten, Hispanic American Historical Review "This is the best history I know about how Mexican politics, national and provincial, changed from ''revolutionary'' to ''unrevolutionary'' between 1940 and 1958.


The research is solid and deep. The details are rich. The writing is lively and pungent. I recommend the book most highly to all seriously interested in the Mexico that gave way to Mexico now."-- John Womack Jr, author of Zapata and the Mexican Revolution "Displaying sharp insight and meticulous original research, Unrevolutionary Mexico traces Mexico''s crucial transition from popular revolution to the distinct and durable regime of the PRI. Richly detailed and readable, the book expertly explores grassroots violence, bossism, graft and electoral shenanigans. To read it is to be present in the creation of a unique political system that set its indelible stamp on modern Mexico."-- Alan Knight, author of The Mexican Revolution "Gillingham''s multi-regional approach masterfully teases out the roots of Mexico''s post-revolutionary ''soft'' dictatorship (dictablanda), analyzing its complex blend of authoritarian and democratic practices in two contrasting provincial states, Veracruz and Guerrero, as it lurched toward greater political stability, civilian rule, and economic development during the pivotal 1945-55 decade.


"-- Heather Fowler-Salamini, author of Women Workers, Entrepreneurs and the Mexican Revolution: The Coffee Culture of Córdoba, Veracruz "This is the best account of the peak and decline of the PRI, Mexico''s long ruling, purportedly revolutionary party. Unrevolutionary Mexico reveals that Mexico''s democratic transition began with surprisingly competitive elections in the 1940s. At the same time, it shows how the economic Mexican Miracle was based in part on the exploitation of peasants via fixed rents and labor drafts. This is required and quite enjoyable reading for modern Mexicanists."-- Ben Fallaw, author of Religion and State Formation in Postrevolutionary Mexico Praise for Cuauhtémoc''s Bones : "Taking as his subject the 1949 discovery of a burial beneath the church altar in a remote village in highland Guerrero, Mexico, reputed to contain the bones of the last Aztec emperor Cuauhtémoc, Paul Gillingham has written an outstanding historical monograph (and whodunit) that unravels the mystery, follows the clues, evaluates the false documents, explains the national fascination with the bones, dismisses the red herring, identifies the perpetrators of the obvious fraud, and places it within efforts to reframe national identity."-- Hispanic American Historical Review "Gillingham''s account, based on broad, thorough research with an impressive combination of primary and secondary sources, articulates a well-written narrative with his profound understanding of Mexican hi.


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