- Título:
Wireless: Radio, Revolution, and the Méxican State, 1897-1938.
- Autor:
CASTRO Joseph Justin
- Editor:
University of Oklahoma
- Fecha:
2013
- Tipo:
Tesis
- Formato:
354p.
- Idioma:
en
- Descripción:
USA
This dissertation explores the interplay of early radio technology and twentieth century state power in Mexico. It argues that wireless technology was crucial to government attempts at incorporating frontiers, foreign policy, the outcome of the Mexican Revolution, and the formation of the single party state that ruled from 1929 to 2000. Examining radio development in Mexico is especially useful because political leaders first incorporated the technology immediately preceding a fractious revolution turned civil war. The subsequent dissolution and reconsolidation of the political order shows how wireless technology affected new attempts at state building during the first half of the twentieth century. Initially used as a tool of centralization, trade, and military domination, the Revolution proved that in the hands of insurrectionists and foreigners, radio could also be a tool of de centralization. The Revolution intensified the tendency of leaders to focus on the medium’s military potential as warring factions incorporated wireless devices to advance their causes.
- Materia:
Radio
Modernización
Tecnologías de la información
Gobierno
Centralización
- Fuente:
PhD Thesis
- Documento número 8311
- Actualizado el viernes, 19 de junio de 2020 01:50:22 a. m.
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