Director: Mario Hernández
Country: Mexico
Antonio Aguilar plays Emiliano Zapata.
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Emiliano Zapata and Otilio Montaño composed this plan and it was signed on 25 November 1911. This plan is considered as a magna carta for the Zapatistas. In this plan, Zapata and his followers clearly break with Madero and his percieved reconciliatory stance. According to the description of the WDL the plan put forward the following demands, "restitution of lands taken from villages during the Porfiriato, and agrarian redistribution of the larger haciendas, with compensation. Zapatista peasants, based in the southern state of Morelos, would claim these rights by arms, continuing the rebellion started, but not completed, by Madero." (Source: https://www.wdl.org/en/item/2970/).
Source: Contributed by Center for the Study of the History of Mexico CARSO and World Digital Library.
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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.
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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.
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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
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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.
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Director/s: Various
Country: Mexico
Year: 2010.
The significance of the revolution in today's Mexico is the principal goal of the various directors that each show different aspects of the revolution and its effect on Mexican society through their own lense.
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Collier's also known as Collier's Weekly.
Volume 50 Issue 24 p.11.
Source: Hathi Trust, digitized by Google, contributed by Princeton University.
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101079822746&view=1up&seq=185&size=125
Collier's Magazine reported regularly on the events that were transpiring in Mexico. Here is a page from the magazine for March 1, 1913, that was published in the aftermath of the execution of President Madero. The page does not report on the execution of the president as there seems to be information lag. Instead, it reports on Madero's return to the National Palace under the assurances from Huerta.
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This photo is from "La ilustración semanal" that was published in Mexico by Compañía Periodística Mexicana. The image is a courtesy from Berlin Ibero-Amerikanisches Institut - Preußischer Kulturbesitz.
Date: December 2, 2013.
See: McNeely, John H. “Origins of the Zapata Revolt in Morelos.” The Hispanic American Historical Review, vol. 46, no. 2, 1966, pp. 153–169. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2518386. Accessed 7 May 2020.
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This image may be protected by the U. S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C).
This photo is from "La ilustración semanal" that was published in Mexico by Compañía Periodística Mexicana. The image is a courtesy from Berlin Ibero-Amerikanisches Institut - Preußischer Kulturbesitz.
Year 1 Issue 21 (February 24, 1914). It has been less than a year since the merciless execution of President Madero but this issue of the journal has no mention of the events that surrounded Mexico.
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