Death
and the Idea of Mexico is the first social, cultural, and political
history of death in a nation that has made death its tutelary sign.
Examining the history of death and of the death sign from the sixteenth-century
holocaust to contemporary Mexican American identity politics, anthropologist
Claudio Lomnitz’s innovative study marks a turning point in
understanding Mexico’s rich and unique use of death imagery.
Unlike contemporary Europeans and Americans, whose denial of death
permeates their cultures, the Mexican people display and cultivate
a jovial familiarity with death. This intimacy with death has become
the cornerstone of Mexico’s national identity.
It is tempting to view this rich elaboration of death imagery as
yet another example of an “invented tradition,” that
is, a cult shaped by the modern state’s cultural policies
or by the narrow interests of contemporary identity politics. Lomnitz
takes a different approach. Rather than flattening out the tradition
by insisting only on the ways it is willfully manipulated, this
book focuses on the dialectical relationship between dying, killing,
and the administration of death, and the very formation of the colonial
state, of a rich and variegated popular culture, and of the Mexican
nation itself. The elevation of Mexican intimacy with death to the
center of national identity is but a moment within that history
— within a history in which the key institutions of society
are built around the claims of the fallen.
Based on a wide range of sources — from missionary testimonies
to newspaper cartoons, from masterpieces of artistic vanguards to
accounts of public executions and political assassinations —
Death and the Idea of Mexico moves beyond the limited methodology
of traditional historiographies of death to probe the depths of
a people and a country whose fearless acquaintance with death shapes
the very terms of their social compact. This work effects a novel
turn in the classical historiography of death — a turn that
can be characterized by a move from social and cultural history
to political history. The move toward the politics of death gives
readers a unique insight into the peculiar story of death in the
Americas.
“This outstanding work was written by an author with a Renaissance
mind. It examines the Mexican people’s in many respects unique
relationship to death throughout several centuries. It brilliantly
straddles the fields of history, anthropology, and religion.”
— Friedrich Katz Also by this author:
The Return of Comrade Ricardo Flores Magón
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