Amelia, Carlos and Rudy sit down for the follow-up episode on the Mexican revolution to discuss the consolidation of the revolutionary state with a focus on the figure of Lázaro Cárdenas. They discuss the origins of yellow unionism and agrarian reform in Mexico, the presidency of Plutarco Calles and the Cristero War, and the radical period in the 1930s which led to mass expropriations, the nationalization of oil and a radical international policy.
Bibliography:
B. Carr – Marxism & Communism in Twentieth-Century Mexico
J. Cockroft – Mexico, Class Formation, Capital Accumulation, and the State
G. Correa-Cabrera, R. A. Ragland – Workers, parties and a “New Deal:” A comparative analysis of corporatist alliances in Mexico, and the United States, 1910–1940
E. Ginzberg – Revolutionary Ideology and Political Destiny in Mexico, 1928-1934: Lazaro Cardenas and Adalberto Tejeda
A. Knight – The Mexican Revolution: A Very Short Introduction
T. Rath – Cardenismo, Revolutionary Citizenship, and the Redefinition of Mexican Militarism, 1934–1940
M. K. Vaughan – Cultural Politics in Revolution: Teachers, Peasants, and Schools in Mexico, 1930-1940
M. K. Vaughan, S. Lewis (ed.) – The Eagle and the Virgin: Nation and Cultural Revolution in Mexico, 1920–1940