Popular Piety and Political Identity in Mexico's Cristero Rebellion

Popular Piety and Political Identity in Mexico's Cristero Rebellion
Author: Matthew Butler
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2004-06-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780197262986

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Dr Butler provides a new interpretation of the cristero war (1926-29) which divided Mexico's peasantry into rival camps loyal to the Catholic Church (cristero) or the Revolution (agrarista). This book puts religion at the heart of our understanding of the revolt by showing how peasant allegiances often resulted from genuinely popular cultural and religious antagonisms. It challenges the assumption that Mexican peasants in the 1920s shared religious outlooks and that their behaviour was mainly driven by political and material factors. Focusing on the state of Michoacán in western-central Mexico, the volume seeks to integrate both cultural and structural lines of inquiry. First charting the uneven character of Michoacán's historical formation in the late colonial period and the nineteenth century, Dr Butler shows how the emergence of distinct agrarian regimes and political cultures was later associated with varying popular responses to post-revolutionary state formation in the areas of educational and agrarian reform. At the same time, it is argued that these structural trends were accompanied by increasingly clear divergences in popular religious cultures, including lay attitudes to the clergy, patterns of religious devotion and deviancy, levels of sacramental participation, and commitment to militant 'social' Catholicism. As peasants in different communities developed distinct parish identities, so the institutional conflict between Church and state acquired diverse meanings and provoked violently contradictory popular responses. Thus the fires of revolt burned all the more fiercely because they inflamed a countryside which - then as now - was deeply divided in matters of faith as well as politics. Based on oral testimonies and careful searches of dozens of ecclesiastical and state archives, this study makes an important contribution to the religious history of the Mexican Revolution.


Popular Piety and Political Identity in Mexico's Cristero Rebellion
Language: en
Pages: 284
Authors: Matthew Butler
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2004-06-17 - Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Dr Butler provides a new interpretation of the cristero war (1926-29) which divided Mexico's peasantry into rival camps loyal to the Catholic Church (cristero)
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Pages: 274
Authors: Jean A. Meyer
Categories: POLITICAL SCIENCE
Type: BOOK - Published: 2014-05-14 - Publisher:

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The Cristero movement is an essential part of the Mexican Revolution. When in 1926 relations between Church and state, old enemies and old partners, eventually
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Authors: David C. Bailey
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Type: BOOK - Published: 2013-04-10 - Publisher: University of Texas Press

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Between 1926 and 1929, thousands of Mexicans fought and died in an attempt to overthrow the government of their country. They were the Cristeros, so called beca
Mexican Exodus
Language: en
Pages: 289
Authors: Julia Grace Darling Young
Categories: Biography & Autobiography
Type: BOOK - Published: 2015 - Publisher:

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The book investigates the formation of the Cristero diaspora, a network of Mexican emigrants, exiles, and refugees across the United States who supported a Mexi
Popular Movements and State Formation in Revolutionary Mexico
Language: en
Pages: 292
Authors: Jennie Purnell
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 1999 - Publisher: Duke University Press

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Purnell reconsiders peasant partisanship in the cristiada of 1926-29, one episode in the broader Mexican Revolution.