Non-Fiction Books:

Creating Mexican Consumer Culture in the Age of Porfirio Díaz

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Paperback / softback
$87.99
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Description

Winner of the 2013 Thomas McGann Award from the Rocky Mountain Council for Latin American Studies Winner of the LASA Mexico 2013 Humanities Book Award In Gabriel Garci?a Ma?rquez’s novel One Hundred Years of Solitude, a character articulates the fascination goods, technology, and modernity held for many Latin Americans in the early twentieth century when he declares that “incredible things are happening in this world.” The modernity he marvels over is the new availability of cheap and useful goods. Steven Bunker’s study shows how goods and consumption embodied modernity in the time of Porfirio Di?az, how they provided proof to Mexicans that “incredible things are happening in this world.”In urban areas, and especially Mexico City, being a consumer increasingly defined what it meant to be Mexican. In an effort to reconstruct everyday life in Porfirian Mexico, Bunker surveys the institutions and discourses of consumption and explores how individuals and groups used the goods, practices, and spaces of urban consumer culture to construct meaning and identities in the rapidly evolving social and physical landscape of the capital city and beyond. Through case studies of tobacco marketing, department stores, advertising, shoplifting, and a famous jewelry robbery and homicide, he provides a colourful walking tour of daily life in Porfirian Mexico City. emphasising the widespread participation in this consumer culture, Bunker’s work overturns conventional wisdom that only the middle and upper classes participated in this culture.

Author Biography:

Steven B. Bunker is an associate professor of history at the University of Alabama.
Release date Australia
June 30th, 2014
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Illustrations
20 halftones, 2 tables
Pages
352
Dimensions
152x229x20
ISBN-13
9780826344557
Product ID
22372703

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