An Educator’s Guide to the Mexican Revolution 3AcknowledgmentsThis educator’s guide was produced in Spring 2014 by staff at the University of New Mexico’s Latin American & Iberian Institute (LAII). Special thanks are due to Adam Flores, graduate assis-tant, and Katrina Dillon, project assistant.Funding was provided by the LAII’s U.S. De-partment of Education Title VI National Resource Center grant.For more information, visit http://laii.unm.edu.
The complete OA pdf can be accessed here: https://laii.unm.edu/info/k-12-educators/assets/documents/mexican-revolution/complete-guide.pdf
Los de abajo (1916) es una novela de la Revolución Mexicana basada en las experiencias que vivió su autor Mariano Azuela como médico militar en las fuerzas de Julián Medina y en las anécdotas que escuchó de sus camaradas. De hecho, uno de sus personajes, Luis Cervantes, comparte semejanzas con la vida del autor, como la de ser médico y unirse a las tropas villistas. (Source: Crystal Harlan - https://www.aboutespanol.com/los-de-abajo-2206746)
Author: Benjamin, Thomas, 1952-
Published: Austin : University of Texas Press, 2000.
The library's e-book can be accessed here: https://libproxy.berkeley.edu/login?qurl=https%3A%2F%2Fmuse.jhu.edu%2Fbook%2F2908%2F
Author: Mariana Libertad Suárez.
Publisher: Secretaría de Cultura del Gobierno del Estado de México, CDMX, 2019.
The book interrogates the notion of what is missed by remaining silent in the narrative of Mexican Revolution from the perspective of Celia Herrera, Nellie Campobello, Consuelo Delgado, Magdalena Mondragón, Rosa de Castaño and María Luisa Ocampo.
A complete OA PDF of the book can be downloaded here: https://ceape.edomex.gob.mx/sites/ceape.edomex.gob.mx/files/Eramos_muchas_mujeres_Web.pdf
Author: Elisa García Barragán, Leticia López Orozco.
Published: México : Secretaria de Cultura ; Ciudad de México : Instituto Nacional de Estudios Historicos de las Revoluciones de México ; Estado de México : Gobierno del Estado de México, 2017.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Molina, Silvia, 1946-
Published: México : Océano, 1987.
Silvia Molina aids us in the demystification of the Mexican Revolution while retaining the narrative of the post-revolutionary Mexico (Hanaï, Marie-José. "Desmitificar El Mito De La Revolución Mexicana." Amerika. (2011).
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: MacLachlan, Colin M.
Published: Berkeley : University of California Press, c1991.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Carlos Fuentes
Published: México : Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1962.
See also: https://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80-22904/
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Guzmán, Martín Luis, 1887-1976.
Published: Madrid, Compañía ibero-americana de publicaciones (s. a.) [1928].
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Puente, Ramón.
México D.F. [Imp. Manuel León Sánchez, s. c. l.] 1938.
Illustrator: Mariano Martínez
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Contreras Torres, Miguel.
Published: México, 1957.
This novel served as a basis for two Mexican movies by Miguel Contreras Torres. One was "La Soldadera," and the other had the same name, "Pueblo en Armas."
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Director: Emilio "El Indio" Fernández.
Country: Mexico
Year: 1956
This film is based on a masterpiece by Rodolfo Usigli whose title is "El gesticulador." The main character of this film is a Professor who falls out with the Rector and his cabinet and thus returns to his native village with his wife and two children. He starts growing corn but the crops fail, in desperation and by choice he assumes a false identity of his grandfather- a revolutionary hero of Mexican Revolution. People of the village rally around him during the election, but he is shot and killed before he can tell "el pueblo," about his true identity.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Usigli, Rodolfo, 1905-1979
Published: México : Stylo, 1947.
UC Berkeley's record shows the following note, ""Pieza para demagogos, en tres actos, con un epílogo sobre la hipocresía del mexicano, doce notas y un ensayo sobre la actualidad de la poesía dramática."
This drama was filmed as a 1956 Mexican film- El Impostor by Emilio "El Indio" Fernández.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Aguilar y Santillán, Rafael, 1863-
Mexico, Impr. Popular, 1911.
Also, a digital copy is available at https://mexicana.cultura.gob.mx/. Additional ecopy is in Harvard's Latin American Pamphlet Digital Collection: https://curiosity.lib.harvard.edu/latin-american-pamphlet-digital-collection/catalog/43-990038219110203941
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Madero, Francisco I., 1873-1913.
Published: Mexico, La Viuda de C. Bouret, 1911.
The Bancroft Library holds a copy of the third edition that is depicted here.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Ribera Carbó, Anna.
Published: México, D.F. : Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 2010.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Paco Ignacio Taibo II.
Published: Mexico, D.F. : Planeta, 2006.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Pancho Villa; División del Norte (Mexico)
Publisher: [Chihuahua?] [1914].
Pancho Villa issued this manifesto on 14 September 1914 addressed the Mexican people. We have created a collage of some relevant pages. The original is held by the UC Berkeley's Bancroft Library.
Editor: Rafael Olea Franco, editor.
Published: México, D.F. : El Colegio de México, 2015.
La Decena Trágica was a series of complicated events in the first stage of the Mexican Revolution that ended in the assassination of President Francisco I. Madero along with his vice-president Pino Suarez. These events have left a strong impression in the memory of the Mexican nation and the artistic creation and re-creation of these events has become an object of this compendium.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Editor/s: Rebeca Monroy Nasr, Samuel L. Villela Flores.
Published: Ciudad de México : Secretaría de Cultura : Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 2017.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Albro, Ward S.
Published Fort Worth : Texas Christian University Press, c1992.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Francisco Pineda Gómez.
Published Ciudad de México : Ediciones Era : Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Secretaría de Cultura, 2019.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Robleto, Hernán, 1895-.
Published: México, Ediciones Botas, 1934.
Hernán Robleto (1895-1968) was born in Nicaragua and he is one of the luminary writers of 20th century Central America. His novels often evolve on the substrate of social content and induce readers in analyzing the narrative that is written from a journalistic perspective.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Cifuentes-Goodbody, Nicholas.
Published: Nashville, Tennessee: Vanderbilt University Press, 2016.
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Delgado, Consuelo.
Published: Mexico, Grupo en Mardia, 1936.
This item is held by Bancroft Library.
The introduction starts with the following phrase, "EL GRUPO EN MARCHA publica esta novela de vigoroso contenido social porque estima que es una aportación valiosa a la ya nutrida pero incompleta bibliografía de la Revvolución Mexicana.
Esta obra tiene fundamentalmente, dos cualidades : primero, está escrita por una mujer incorporada a la lucha de clases que en ningún
momento traiciona los valores específicos de su sexo; segundo, es una visión de nuestro último movimiento político-social a través de una alma, de una sensibilidad auténticamente femenina."
Author: Urquizo, Francisco L. (Francisco Luis), 1891-1969.
Published México [Talleres gráficos del Departamento de publicidad y propaganda de la Sría. de educación pública] 1943.
Diego Isidro Díaz Pérez y Ana Verónica Villarroel Márquez in Revista literaria monolito's article, "Mujeres en obras literarias de la Revolución Mexicana» por Diego Isidro Díaz Pérez y Ana Verónica Villarroel Márquez," provide synthesis of the novel as follows, "Tropa vieja se ubica entre los momentos previos al levantamiento de Francisco Madero y concluye cuando éste es asesinado por el general Victoriano Huerta. A lo largo de la novela, el autor nos regala diferentes referentes que ayudan a ubicarnos temporalmente con el inicio y desarrollo de la Revolución, tales como: “- Por ahí andan diciendo que ha salido un tal Madero; quiere ser presidente de la república y tumbar a don Porfirio” (Urquizo, 2016: 88).
Fair Academic Use Only.
This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
Author: Campobello, Nellie, 1900-1986.
Published México, D.F. : Ediciones Era, 2000.
Cartucho: Tales of the struggle in northern Mexico is one of the great texts of Mexican literature. As Jorge Aguilar Mora points out in the prologue, Cartucho is at all critical corners of our historical-literary discourse: it is perhaps the most extraordinary book, where autobiographical singularity, popular anonymity, historical relationship, literary transparency, family chronicle. (Source: https://www.edicionesera.com.mx/libro/cartucho_78459/)
Nellie Campobello was born in Villa Ocampo, Durango, on November 7, 1900; she dies in Progreso de Obregón, Hidalgo, on July 9, 1986. Narrator and poet. Her literary works portray passages from the Mexican revolution.
Author: Agustín Vera (1889-1946).
Published: San Luis Potosí, Talleres linotipográficaos Accion [19--]
MexicanpPlaywright and novelist, Agustin Vera (1889-1946), wrote a novel of the Revolution, La Revancha (Revenge) (San Luis Potosi, 1930).