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2001

6 x 9 in.
365 pp., 15 b&w photos, 4 maps

ISBN: 978-0-292-77107-9
$35.00, paperback
Print-on-demand title; expedited shipping not available
33% website discount: $23.45

 
 
 
     

Of Wonders and Wise Men
Religion and Popular Cultures in Southeast Mexico, 1800-1876

By Terry Rugeley

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

2004 Harvey L. Johnson Award
Southwest Council of Latin American Studies

available through netLibrary

 

"This is a major new work on nineteenth-century Mexico that contributes to our understanding of popular religion, the nature of political conservatism, and the nature of local politics.... It represents the most innovative and creative scholarship now being undertaken in Mexican history...and will be widely used in classes and discussed by scholars."

—William H. Beezley, Professor of History, University of Arizona

In the tumultuous decades following Mexico's independence from Spain, religion provided a unifying force among the Mexican people, who otherwise varied greatly in ethnicity and socioeconomic status. Accordingly, religion and the popular cultures surrounding it form the lens through which Terry Rugeley focuses this cultural history of southeast Mexico from independence (1821) to the rise of the dictator Porfirio Díaz in 1876.

Drawing on a wealth of previously unused archival material, Rugeley vividly reconstructs the folklore, beliefs, attitudes, and cultural practices of the Maya and Hispanic peoples of the Yucatán. In engagingly written chapters, he explores folklore and folk wisdom, urban piety, iconography, and anticlericalism. Interspersed among the chapters are detailed portraits of individual people, places, and institutions, that, with the archival evidence, offer a full and fascinating history of the outlooks, entertainments, and daily lives of the inhabitants of southeast Mexico in the nineteenth century. Rugeley also links this rich local history with larger events to show how macro changes in Mexico affected ordinary people.

Terry Rugeley is Associate Professor of History at the University of Oklahoma.


 Also by the Author Yucatán's Maya Peasantry and the Origins of the Caste War
 Of Related Interest Ingham, Mary, Michael, and Lucifer

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