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Mexico, the End of the Revolution
By (Author) Donald C. Hodges
By (author) Ross Gandy
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Politics and government
972.0816
Hardback
224
This study reveals how the social pact, formalized during the armed stage of the Mexican Revolution (1910-20) and implemented during the second stage (1920-40), was upset during the third or arrested stage (1940-70) when the bureaucrat-professionals at the helm opted for intensive economic development by taking the capitalist road. Although momentarily revived during yet a fourth stage of revolution (1970-82), this social pact was subsequently betrayed from within by the official party of the Revolution and undermined from without by the operation of economic forces behind the scenes. In this first book on the complete history of the Mexican Revolution, Hodges and Gandy reveal that, along with the end of its social pact, Mexico passed out of its former nationalist and capitalist orbit to enter the new professional societies and global order fathered by the transnationals.
"If some one still wants to know what happened to the Mexican Revolution, a radical answer can be found in this book. As old soldiers, revolutions never die. they just fade away. In Mexico, as in similar events elsewhere, the revolution was betrayed long before its end, but in capturing its spirit and essence, the authors ar helping to keep its legacy alive."-Lorenzo Meyer Profesor de Relaciones Internacionales El Colegio de Mexico Co-author of THe United States and Mexico and Under the Shadow of the Mexican Revolution
"This important and readable book deserves a wide audience. Both the history and the interpretation of the Revolution will interest scholars and the public."-Manuel Lopez Gallo author of Las Grandes Mentiras de Krouze
[e]nergetically written, offering a good survey of the revolution and a provocative discussion of bureaucratic capitalism in Mexico. It provides a general survey that could supplement a college history course or enlighten and entertain an interested layperson.-The Americas
For the scholar and the layman, the book is highly recommended.-Multicultural Review
Hodges and Gandy have written one of the most informed, informative, and interesting analyses available of 20th-century Mexico. With an ideological perspective neither hidden nor heavy-handed, the book is eminently readable, with dozens of delightfully quotable phrases. The selected bibliography obscures the considerable reading and magisterial familiarity with Mexican government, society, and politics. The authors offer the best explanation presently available of the quandary of Mexican economic development, in which neither state policies nor massive external investment has altered the routine of daily life for the vast majority of citizens. Their principal thesis is that an overwhelming number of analysts of the Mexican Revolution have failed to grasp the true significance of the revolution that occurred after 1910. With highly persuasive facts and figures, Hodges and Gandy convincingly show that the revolutionary changes in modern Mexico ended not with the victory of capitalism--in any combination of foreign and domestic capitalists--but in a rapacious bureaucracy that absorbs more of the gross domestic output than either salaried workers or corporate profit seekers. Mexico, they claim, is dominated by "bureaupreneurs instead of entrepreneurs." Highly recommended for all levels and collections.-Choice
"energetically written, offering a good survey of the revolution and a provocative discussion of bureaucratic capitalism in Mexico. It provides a general survey that could supplement a college history course or enlighten and entertain an interested layperson."-The Americas
"[e]nergetically written, offering a good survey of the revolution and a provocative discussion of bureaucratic capitalism in Mexico. It provides a general survey that could supplement a college history course or enlighten and entertain an interested layperson."-The Americas
"For the scholar and the layman, the book is highly recommended."-Multicultural Review
"Hodges and Gandy have written one of the most informed, informative, and interesting analyses available of 20th-century Mexico. With an ideological perspective neither hidden nor heavy-handed, the book is eminently readable, with dozens of delightfully quotable phrases. The selected bibliography obscures the considerable reading and magisterial familiarity with Mexican government, society, and politics. The authors offer the best explanation presently available of the quandary of Mexican economic development, in which neither state policies nor massive external investment has altered the routine of daily life for the vast majority of citizens. Their principal thesis is that an overwhelming number of analysts of the Mexican Revolution have failed to grasp the true significance of the revolution that occurred after 1910. With highly persuasive facts and figures, Hodges and Gandy convincingly show that the revolutionary changes in modern Mexico ended not with the victory of capitalism--in any combination of foreign and domestic capitalists--but in a rapacious bureaucracy that absorbs more of the gross domestic output than either salaried workers or corporate profit seekers. Mexico, they claim, is dominated by "bureaupreneurs instead of entrepreneurs." Highly recommended for all levels and collections."-Choice
DONALD C. HODGES is a professor of philosophy and an affiliate professor of political science at Florida State University. ROSS GANDY is a professional philosopher and historian who has lived and taught in Mexico since 1970.