Tlatelolco massacre, Mexico Research Papers (original) (raw)

Hotel Mexico: Dwelling on the '68 Movement 2017 Arvey Foundation Book Award, Association for Latin American Art In 1968, Mexico prepared to host the Olympic games amid growing civil unrest. The spectacular sports facilities and... more

Hotel Mexico: Dwelling on the '68 Movement

2017 Arvey Foundation Book Award, Association for Latin American Art

In 1968, Mexico prepared to host the Olympic games amid growing civil unrest. The spectacular sports facilities and urban redevelopment projects built by the government in Mexico City mirrored the country’s rapid but uneven modernization. In the same year, a street-savvy democratization movement led by students emerged in the city. Throughout the summer, the ‘68 Movement staged protests underscoring a widespread sense of political disenfranchisement. Just ten days before the Olympics began, nearly three hundred student protestors were massacred by the military in a plaza at the core of a new public housing complex.

In spite of institutional denial and censorship, the 1968 massacre remains a touchstone in contemporary Mexican culture thanks to the public memory work of survivors and Mexico’s leftist intelligentsia. In this highly original study of the afterlives of the ’68 Movement, George F. Flaherty explores how urban spaces—material but also literary, photographic, and cinematic—became an archive of 1968, providing a framework for de facto modes of justice for years to come.

“George F. Flaherty’s wildly intermedial study of the Mexican state, modernization, and the 1968 student movement is a tour de force of cultural studies. One leaves this book with a rich appreciation for how the state attempts to control the flow of affect, information, bodies, and ideas.” —Mary K. Coffey, author of How a Revolutionary Art Became Official Culture: Murals, Museums, and the Mexican State

“This important study expands the field of inquiry into Mexico’s long 1960s beyond the social and cultural domain to encompass questions of structure and critical formation and of histories evoked by such place names and events as Lecumberri, Tlatelolco, and the Olympics.” —Roberto Tejada, Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen Distinguished Professor, University of Houston

“In Hotel Mexico, Flaherty brilliantly deploys the gritty detail of archival documents and visual culture to challenge the grand promises and veiled threats of the modernizing discourse known as the Mexican Miracle.” —Esther Gabara, author of Errant Modernism: The Ethos of Photography in Mexico and Brazil

George F. Flaherty is Assistant Professor of Latin American and U.S. Latino Art History at the University of Texas at Austin.

Cover illustration: Adam Wiseman, from Tlatelolco Desmentido series, 2013.

University of California Press
www.ucpress.edu
[ISBN 978-0-520-29107-2]