
Landscaping Indigenous Mexico: The Liberal State and Capitalism in the Pur?pecha Highlands - Hardcover
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A history of the Pur?pecha people's survival amid environmental and political changes.
Landscapes are more than geological formations; they are living records of human struggles. Landscaping Indigenous Mexico unearths the history of Ju?tarhu, an Indigenous landscape shaped and nurtured by the Pur?pecha--a formidable Mesoamerican people whose power once rivaled that of the Aztecs. Although cataclysmic changes came with European contact and colonization, Ju?tarhu's enduring agroecology continued to sustain local life through centuries of challenges.
Contesting essentialist narratives of Indigenous penury, P?rez Montesinos shows how Pur?pechas thrived after Mexican independence in 1821, using Ju?tarhu's diverse agroecology to negotiate continued autonomy amid waves of national economic and political upheaval. After 1870, however, autonomy waned under the pressure of land privatization policies, state intervention, and industrial logging. On the eve of the Mexican Revolution in 1910, Pur?pechas stood at a critical juncture: Would the Indigenous landscape endure or succumb? Offering a fresh perspective on a seemingly well-worn subject, P?rez Montesinos argues that Michoac?n, long considered a peripheral revolutionary region, saw one of the era's most radical events: the destruction of the liberal order and the timber capitalism of Ju?tarhu.
Fernando P?rez Montesinos is an associate professor at UCLA. A historian of nineteenth-century Mexico and the Mexican Revolution, his work includes the edited volume El ascenso maderista y el fin del r?gimen porfiriano. He is a senior editor of the Hispanic American Historical Review.
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