Alcohol and Nationhood in Nineteenth-Century Mexico

Alcohol and Nationhood in Nineteenth-Century Mexico

by Deborah Toner
Alcohol and Nationhood in Nineteenth-Century Mexico

Alcohol and Nationhood in Nineteenth-Century Mexico

by Deborah Toner

Hardcover

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Overview

Drawing on an analysis of issues surrounding the consumption of alcohol in a diverse range of source materials, including novels, newspapers, medical texts, and archival records, this lively and engaging interdisciplinary study explores sociocultural nation-building processes in Mexico between 1810 and 1910. Examining the historical importance of drinking as both an important feature of Mexican social life and a persistent source of concern for Mexican intellectuals and politicians, Deborah Toner's Alcohol and Nationhood in Nineteenth-Century Mexico offers surprising insights into how the nation was constructed and deconstructed in the nineteenth century.

Although Mexican intellectuals did indeed condemn the physically and morally debilitating aspects of excessive alcohol consumption and worried that particularly Mexican drinks and drinking places were preventing Mexico's progress as a nation, they also identified more culturally valuable aspects of Mexican drinking cultures that ought to be celebrated as part of an "authentic" Mexican national culture. The intertwined literary and historical analysis in this study illustrates how wide-ranging the connections were between ideas about drinking, poverty, crime, insanity, citizenship, patriotism, gender, sexuality, race, and ethnicity in the nineteenth century, and the book makes timely and important contributions to the fields of Latin American literature, alcohol studies, and the social and cultural history of nation-building.

Deborah Toner is a lecturer in modern history at the University of Leicester and a leading convener of the Warwick Drinking Studies Network.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780803269743
Publisher: Nebraska
Publication date: 06/01/2015
Series: The Mexican Experience
Pages: 384
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author


Deborah Toner is a lecturer in modern history at the University of Leicester and a leading convener of the Warwick Drinking Studies Network.

Table of Contents


List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Alcohol, Literature, and Nation-Building
Part 1. Imagining the Nation through Alcohol, Class, and Gender 
1. Everything in Its Right Place? Social Drinking Spaces, Popular Culture, and Nationhood
2. Patriotic Heroes and Consummate Drunks: Alcohol, Masculinity, and Nationhood
Part 2. Alcohol, Morality, and Medicine in the Story of National Development
3. Yankees, Toffs, and Miss Quixote: Drunken Bodies, Citizenship, and the Hope of Moral Reform
4. Medicine, Madness, and Modernity in Porfirian Mexico: Alcoholism as the National Disease
Conclusion: Drunkenness, Death, and Mexican Melancholia
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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