Public History in Mexico
Memories, Displacements, and Intimacies
Herausgeber: Moreno Carranco, María; Zubiaurre, Maite; Barbosa Cruz, Mario; Adonon Viveros, Akuavi
Public History in Mexico
Memories, Displacements, and Intimacies
Herausgeber: Moreno Carranco, María; Zubiaurre, Maite; Barbosa Cruz, Mario; Adonon Viveros, Akuavi
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This collection of essays explores how history is created, shared, and contested in urban and marginalized spaces by examining memory, displacement, resilience, and community-driven historical interventions across Mexico.
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This collection of essays explores how history is created, shared, and contested in urban and marginalized spaces by examining memory, displacement, resilience, and community-driven historical interventions across Mexico.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Global Perspectives on Public History
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 274
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Dezember 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 422g
- ISBN-13: 9781032531144
- ISBN-10: 1032531142
- Artikelnr.: 74979820
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Global Perspectives on Public History
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 274
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Dezember 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 422g
- ISBN-13: 9781032531144
- ISBN-10: 1032531142
- Artikelnr.: 74979820
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
María Moreno Carranco is a professor in the Department of Social Sciences at UAM-Cuajimalpa. Her research focuses on urban megaprojects, the impact of neoliberal globalization on contemporary cities, the effects of earthquakes on Mexico City's urban communities, and shifts in urban living during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Akuavi Adonon Viveros is a professor in the Department of Social Sciences at UAM-Cuajimalpa. Her research focuses on legal anthropology studies, ethno-racial classifications, national building narratives, and urban and territorial memory. Mario Barbosa Cruz is a professor in the Department of Humanities at UAM-Cuajimalpa. His research focuses on social and urban history, history of labor, middle classes in Mexico, and the relationship between history and memory. Maite Zubiaurre is a professor in the Humanities at UCLA. She is the initiator and principal investigator of Forensic Empathy, a multi-pronged interdisciplinary endeavor that looks at migration, migrant death, the ecologies of migrant care, and material culture at the US-Mexico border. She is also an activist and a filmmaker.
Introduction Memories of the Urban 1. Public History in the Making. The
Pueblos Originarios of Mexico City: Memory, Territory, and Legal Status 2.
Memories of the Urban Past: The Experience of Metropolitan Histories 3.
Stories of El Parián: Public History as an Organizing Tool in Urban
Community-Based Processes Periphery and Erasure 4. Memory, Trauma, and
Resilience: Stories of the 19S Earthquake 5. Periferia gráfica 6. Creating
Memory and the Reimagining of the Edge of Tenochtitlan Exclusion Beyond
Mexico City 7. The Self-Taught Border Art of the Deported: Luis Sotero 8.
Humanizing Deportation: An Archive of Migrant Knowledge 9. Unveiling
Feminist Cartography in Yucatan: From the First Feminist Congress of 1916
to the First Women to Hold Elected Office in 1923 Re-Placing the Museum
10. Relic, Connection, Loss: Public History and Community Narratives in
Mexico 11. From Praxis to Production: The Symbolic Displacements of
Linguistic Patrimony in Mexico's Nineteenth Century 12. A Community Museum
in the City: Heritage and Public Uses of the Past in Valle de Chalco
Solidaridad Intimate Spaces 13. Between Joy and Frailty: Minimal Stories of
Dwelling in Mexico City 14. The Invisibles of the Arts: Stories of
Performance Artists from Confinement 15. Stuck at Home: A Comic on Covid-19
Pueblos Originarios of Mexico City: Memory, Territory, and Legal Status 2.
Memories of the Urban Past: The Experience of Metropolitan Histories 3.
Stories of El Parián: Public History as an Organizing Tool in Urban
Community-Based Processes Periphery and Erasure 4. Memory, Trauma, and
Resilience: Stories of the 19S Earthquake 5. Periferia gráfica 6. Creating
Memory and the Reimagining of the Edge of Tenochtitlan Exclusion Beyond
Mexico City 7. The Self-Taught Border Art of the Deported: Luis Sotero 8.
Humanizing Deportation: An Archive of Migrant Knowledge 9. Unveiling
Feminist Cartography in Yucatan: From the First Feminist Congress of 1916
to the First Women to Hold Elected Office in 1923 Re-Placing the Museum
10. Relic, Connection, Loss: Public History and Community Narratives in
Mexico 11. From Praxis to Production: The Symbolic Displacements of
Linguistic Patrimony in Mexico's Nineteenth Century 12. A Community Museum
in the City: Heritage and Public Uses of the Past in Valle de Chalco
Solidaridad Intimate Spaces 13. Between Joy and Frailty: Minimal Stories of
Dwelling in Mexico City 14. The Invisibles of the Arts: Stories of
Performance Artists from Confinement 15. Stuck at Home: A Comic on Covid-19
Introduction Memories of the Urban 1. Public History in the Making. The
Pueblos Originarios of Mexico City: Memory, Territory, and Legal Status 2.
Memories of the Urban Past: The Experience of Metropolitan Histories 3.
Stories of El Parián: Public History as an Organizing Tool in Urban
Community-Based Processes Periphery and Erasure 4. Memory, Trauma, and
Resilience: Stories of the 19S Earthquake 5. Periferia gráfica 6. Creating
Memory and the Reimagining of the Edge of Tenochtitlan Exclusion Beyond
Mexico City 7. The Self-Taught Border Art of the Deported: Luis Sotero 8.
Humanizing Deportation: An Archive of Migrant Knowledge 9. Unveiling
Feminist Cartography in Yucatan: From the First Feminist Congress of 1916
to the First Women to Hold Elected Office in 1923 Re-Placing the Museum
10. Relic, Connection, Loss: Public History and Community Narratives in
Mexico 11. From Praxis to Production: The Symbolic Displacements of
Linguistic Patrimony in Mexico's Nineteenth Century 12. A Community Museum
in the City: Heritage and Public Uses of the Past in Valle de Chalco
Solidaridad Intimate Spaces 13. Between Joy and Frailty: Minimal Stories of
Dwelling in Mexico City 14. The Invisibles of the Arts: Stories of
Performance Artists from Confinement 15. Stuck at Home: A Comic on Covid-19
Pueblos Originarios of Mexico City: Memory, Territory, and Legal Status 2.
Memories of the Urban Past: The Experience of Metropolitan Histories 3.
Stories of El Parián: Public History as an Organizing Tool in Urban
Community-Based Processes Periphery and Erasure 4. Memory, Trauma, and
Resilience: Stories of the 19S Earthquake 5. Periferia gráfica 6. Creating
Memory and the Reimagining of the Edge of Tenochtitlan Exclusion Beyond
Mexico City 7. The Self-Taught Border Art of the Deported: Luis Sotero 8.
Humanizing Deportation: An Archive of Migrant Knowledge 9. Unveiling
Feminist Cartography in Yucatan: From the First Feminist Congress of 1916
to the First Women to Hold Elected Office in 1923 Re-Placing the Museum
10. Relic, Connection, Loss: Public History and Community Narratives in
Mexico 11. From Praxis to Production: The Symbolic Displacements of
Linguistic Patrimony in Mexico's Nineteenth Century 12. A Community Museum
in the City: Heritage and Public Uses of the Past in Valle de Chalco
Solidaridad Intimate Spaces 13. Between Joy and Frailty: Minimal Stories of
Dwelling in Mexico City 14. The Invisibles of the Arts: Stories of
Performance Artists from Confinement 15. Stuck at Home: A Comic on Covid-19







