From acclaimed and prize-winning historian Paul Gillingham, a rich and vibrant history of one of the world's most diverse, politically ground-breaking, and influential of countries.
At the beginning of his masterful work of scholarship and narration, Paul Gillingham writes, from its outset "Mexico was more profoundly, globally hybrid than anywhere else in the prior history of the world." Over the ensuing five centuries, Mexicans have prefigured and shaped the course of human lives across the globe.
Gillingham begins in 1511 with the dramatic shipwreck of two Spanish sailors in the far south of Mexico. Ten years later Hernán Cortés led an army of European adventurers and indigenous rebels to seize the legendary island city of Tenochtitlán, the center of Montezuma's empire, the largest in the Americas. The capture of the future Mexico City was, more than an extraordinary military event, the collision of two long-separated worlds, radically different in everything from biota to urban planning. Spaniards discovered tomatoes, chocolate, and a city larger and more sophisticated than anything they had ever seen. Mexicans discovered horses, wheels, and lethal germs, sparking a cataclysmic century of disease that wiped out a majority of the pre-existing population and led to a unique recombination of European and indigenous cultures. The industrial mining of Mexico's silver transformed the wealth and trade of the world. Mexico's independence from the Spanish Empire in 1821 led to a calamitous mid-century war with the United States and one of the first great social revolutions that brought peace for Mexicans throughout many of the global horrors of the 20th century, before the country itself collapsed into the violence of the cartels and a refugee crisis in the 2000s.
The history of Mexico has been, Gillingham shows, one of suffering empire but also of overcoming. Through it all the country set new standards for inclusivity, for progressive social policies, for artistic expression, for adroitly balancing dictatorship and democracy. While racial divides endured, so too did indigenous peoples, who enjoyed rights unthinkable in the United States. Mexico was among the first countries to abolish slavery in 1829, and Mexicans elected North America's first Black president, Vicente Guerrero, its only indigenous president, Benito Juárez, and its only woman president, Claudia Sheinbaum.
As elegantly written as it is powerful in scope, rich in character and anecdote, Mexico uses the latest research to dazzling effect, showing how often Mexico has been a dynamic and vital shaper of world affairs.
"Essential, lively reading for anyone wishing to understand Mexico and contemporary geopolitics alike." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Mexico contains multitudes, insists this vivid new history...With an eye for revealing details and a rejection of tired bromides, Gillingham describes a cultural melting pot that, despite hindrances, has succeeded better than some more powerful nations in living up to its ideals." —Booklist
"This is the history of a country at the center of the world, from the precarious beginnings of colonialism to the violent throes of democracy. Gillingham has written a one-of-a-kind book, populated by large and small characters, spanning five hundred years of conflict and resilience, all in a masterful prose and a sharp, intelligent dialogue with the reader. The universality and uniqueness of this story makes us all Mexican." —Pablo Piccato, author of A Brief History of Violence in Mexico, and Professor of History, Columbia University
"A rollicking and stereotype-busting tour through five centuries of Mexican history. As Gillingham demonstrates, it's Mexico—not the United States—that merits the title of the world's earliest and greatest melting pot. Sweeping from the Sonoran copper mines to the rainforests of Chiapas to Mexico City's mansions, Gillingham dissects the country's politics, ideas, and contradictions with flair. The rare book that is as entertaining as it is learned and ingeniously argued." —Deborah Cohen, author of Last Call at the Hotel Imperial and Director of the Roberta Buffett Institute for Global Affairs
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Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
Paul Gillingham is the author of the prize-winning books Cuauhtémoc's Bones and Unrevolutionary Mexico. He is Professor of Latin American History at Northwestern University.

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