Knowing History in Mexico: An Ethnography of Citizenship
While much has been written about national history and citizenship, anthropologist Trevor Stack focuses on the history and citizenship of towns and cities. Basing his inquiry on fieldwork in west Mexican towns near Guadalajara, Stack begins by observing that people talked (and wrote) of their towns’ history and not just of Mexico’s.

Key to Stack’s study is the insight that knowing history can give someone public status or authority. It can make someone stand out as a good or eminent citizen. What is it about history that makes this so? What is involved in knowing history and who is good at it? And what do they gain from being eminent citizens, whether of towns or nations?

As well as academic historians, Stack interviewed people from all walks of life—bricklayers, priests, teachers, politicians, peasant farmers, lawyers, and migrants. Resisting the idea that history is intrinsically interesting or valuable—that one simply must know the past in order to understand the present—he explores the very idea of “the past” and asks why it is valued by so many people.
1111068983
Knowing History in Mexico: An Ethnography of Citizenship
While much has been written about national history and citizenship, anthropologist Trevor Stack focuses on the history and citizenship of towns and cities. Basing his inquiry on fieldwork in west Mexican towns near Guadalajara, Stack begins by observing that people talked (and wrote) of their towns’ history and not just of Mexico’s.

Key to Stack’s study is the insight that knowing history can give someone public status or authority. It can make someone stand out as a good or eminent citizen. What is it about history that makes this so? What is involved in knowing history and who is good at it? And what do they gain from being eminent citizens, whether of towns or nations?

As well as academic historians, Stack interviewed people from all walks of life—bricklayers, priests, teachers, politicians, peasant farmers, lawyers, and migrants. Resisting the idea that history is intrinsically interesting or valuable—that one simply must know the past in order to understand the present—he explores the very idea of “the past” and asks why it is valued by so many people.
19.99 In Stock
Knowing History in Mexico: An Ethnography of Citizenship

Knowing History in Mexico: An Ethnography of Citizenship

by Trevor Stack
Knowing History in Mexico: An Ethnography of Citizenship

Knowing History in Mexico: An Ethnography of Citizenship

by Trevor Stack

eBook

$19.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

While much has been written about national history and citizenship, anthropologist Trevor Stack focuses on the history and citizenship of towns and cities. Basing his inquiry on fieldwork in west Mexican towns near Guadalajara, Stack begins by observing that people talked (and wrote) of their towns’ history and not just of Mexico’s.

Key to Stack’s study is the insight that knowing history can give someone public status or authority. It can make someone stand out as a good or eminent citizen. What is it about history that makes this so? What is involved in knowing history and who is good at it? And what do they gain from being eminent citizens, whether of towns or nations?

As well as academic historians, Stack interviewed people from all walks of life—bricklayers, priests, teachers, politicians, peasant farmers, lawyers, and migrants. Resisting the idea that history is intrinsically interesting or valuable—that one simply must know the past in order to understand the present—he explores the very idea of “the past” and asks why it is valued by so many people.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826352545
Publisher: University of New Mexico Press
Publication date: 11/15/2012
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 184
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Trevor Stack is director of the Centre for Citizenship, Civil Society and Rule of Law at the University of Aberdeen, where he also teaches in the Department of Hispanic Studies.

Table of Contents

Maps, Illustrations, and Figures vii

Introduction xi

Part 1 The Truth of History: An Anthropological Approach to History as Public Knowledge

Chapter 1 What Is Historia? From Oral History and Memory Studies to the Anthropology of History 3

Chapter 2 The Past of History: Valuing a Public Kind of Truth 19

Part 2 Knowing History, Being Citizens of Towns

Chapter 3 Knowing History, Having Cultura, Being Citizens 33

Chapter 4 Skewing of History: Who Could Know History? 47

Chapter 5 Juggling Rooting and Cultura: Cosmopolitan Citizens 61

Part 3 Other Histories: National History and the History of Virgins

Chapter 6 Towns and Nations: Different Histories, Different Citizenships 81

Chapter 7 Histories of the Virgin: The Higher Ground of Secular History 94

Part 4 Histories of History: Tracing History and Histories Back in Time

Chapter 8 Shifts in History: How a History Changes over Time 111

Chapter 9 A Successful History: What Did Not Change 125

Chapter 10 The Success of History: How a Genre Prospers 135

Epilogue: Citizenship Beyond the State? 147

References 151

Index 161

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews