This innovative history utilizes the built environment as a means of tracing the path of the consolidation of the Mexican Revolution. Patrice Elizabeth Olsen considers the physical changes in Mexico City's built environment, using them to evaluate the extent and direction of regime consolidation of successive governments during the critical period from 1920 to 1940. Architects, engineers, politicians, and entrepreneurs alike expressed visions of what modern Mexico should be and sought to improve the nation through an array of initiatives. Their successes and failures, and thus the direction of the revolution, is written in the capital city. The author's interdisciplinary approach offers an important contribution to the study of Mexican political history; and the aesthetics of modernity.
Patrice Elizabeth Olsen is associate professor of history at Illinois State University.
Preface: Architecture Never Lies
Chapter 1: La Revolución Constructiva (1920-1928)
Chapter 2: Gobernar a la Ciudad Es Servirla : The Maximato and Further Institutionalization of the Revolution
Chapter 3: La Ciudad, La Casa de Todos
Chapter 4: The City and the Expanding Revolution
Chapter 5: The Cityscape and New Conceptions of the State
Chapter 6: A Home for the Revolution: Patterns and Meaning in Residential Development
Chapter 7: Conclusion: The City and the Revolution, in Aggregate