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Conflict and correspondence : belonging and urban community in Guadalajara, Mexico, 1939-1947 / Jason H. Dormady

Van Pelt Library HN120.G8 D67 2025
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Dormady, Jason, 1975- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Urbanization--Mexico--Guadalajara--20th century.
Urbanization.
City planning--Mexico--Guadalajara--History--20th century.
City planning.
Guadalajara (Mexico)--Social conditions--20th century.
Guadalajara (Mexico).
Physical Description:
xii, 247 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Place of Publication:
Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, [2025]
Summary:
In the decades following the 1910 Mexican Revolution, Guadalajara faced immense demographic and economic transformation, stunning both longtime residents and new arrivals. The city's population nearly tripled from 1920 to 1950, and the resultant population boom strained government resources and challenged living standards for all. In "Conflict and Correspondence" Jason H. Dormady examines the critical transition period when Guadalajara lost control of urban growth after 1939 and when the newly empowered state and federal governments began to exercise immense control over the development of the city in 1947. As the city changed around them, residents used petitions and letters to municipal officials to help address their feelings of alienation, isolation, and separation from the community around them. Petitions took the form of sensate, moral, recreational, spiritual, and gendered arguments about creating livable communities and avoiding the disorientation experienced by urban transformation. In the context of infrastructure failures, tight housing markets, and a dramatic aesthetic transition, petitions on these topics reinforced to residents--and, they hoped, city officials--their belonging to the community. Resident petitions reveal how everyday people lived the consequences of the 1910 revolution as they advocated for shaping space and building place in midcentury Guadalajara.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 217-238) and index
ISBN:
9781496229526
1496229525
9781496244413
1496244419
OCLC:
1553026218

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