- Título:
Ink Under the Fingernails: Making Print in Nineteenth-Century Mexico City
- Autor:
ZELTSMAN Corinna
- Editor:
Duke University
- Fecha:
2016
- Tipo:
Tesis
- Formato:
2016
- Idioma:
en
- Descripción:
USA
This dissertation examines Mexico City’s material politics of print —the central actors engaged in making print, their activities and relationships, and the legal, business, and social dimensions of production — across the nineteenth century. Inside urban printshops, a socially diverse group of men ranging from manual laborers to educated editors collaborated to make the printed items that fueled political debates and partisan struggles in the new republic. By investigating how print was produced, regulated, and consumed, this dissertation argues that printers shaped some of the most pressing conflicts that marked Mexico’s first formative century: over freedom of expression, the role of religion in government, and the emergence of liberalism. Printers shaped debates not only because they issued texts that fueled elite politics but precisely because they operated at the nexus where new liberal guarantees like freedom of the press and intellectual property intersected with politics and patronage, the regulatory efforts of the emerging state, and the harsh realities of a post colonial economy.
- Materia:
Religión
Gobierno
Libertad de expresión
Política
Prensa
- Fuente:
PhD Thesis (History)
- Documento número 8314
- Actualizado el viernes, 19 de junio de 2020 12:44:56 p. m.
- Enlace directo a este documento