Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction: Constructing Consent, Inciting Conflict
Chapter 2 Giants and Gypsies: Corpus Christi in Colonial Mexico City
Chapter 3 Lewd Songs and Dances from the Streets of Eighteenth-Century New Spain
Chapter 4 The Working Poor and the Eighteenth-Century Colonial State: Gender, Public Order, and Work Discipline
Chapter 5 A World of Images: Cult, Ritual, and Society in Colonial Mexico City
Chapter 6 Public Celebrations, Popular Culture, and labor Discipline in Eighteenth-Century Chihuahua
Chapter 7 Policia y Buen Gobierno: Municipal Efforts to Regulate Public Behavior, 1821?1857
Chapter 8 Streetwise History: The Paseo de la Reforma and the Porfirian State, 1876?1910
Chapter 9 Proletarians, Politicos, and Patriarchs: The Use and Abuse of Cultural Customs in the Early Industrialization of Mexico City, 1880?1910
Chapter 10 The Porfirian Smart Set Anticipates Thorstein Veblen in Guadalajara
Chapter 11 Progreso Forzado: Workers and the Inculcation of the Capitalist Work Ethic in the Parral Mining District
Chapter 12 The Construction of the Patriotic Festival in Tecamachalco, Puebla, 1900?1946
Chapter 13 Popular Reactions to the Educational Reforms of Cardenismo
Chapter 14 Burning Saints, Molding Minds: Iconoclasm, Civic Ritual, and the Failed Cultural Revolution
Chapter 15 Misiones Culturales, Teatro Conasupo, and Teatro Comunidad: the Evolution of Rural Theater
Chapter 16 The Ceremonial and Political Roles of Village Bands, 1846?1974
Chapter 17 Conclusion: The State as Vampire—Hegemonic Projects, Public Ritual, and Popular Culture in Mexico, 1600?1990