The Annexation of Mexico: From the Aztecs to the IMF,
by John Ross, 1998, Common
Courage Press, Box 702, Monroe, Maine 04951, USA. A mix of old and new history written with a sense of humor seasoned with anecdotes, all attributed to his sources, Ross's account reads with the ease and fascination of a well-written novel. And he's no starry-eyed
idealist oblivious to faults among indigenous conquerors, as the following illustrates:
474 years later, on the eve of the annual commemoration
of the fall of Tenochtitlan --an event
that brings hordes of Aztec revivalist troupes
to the Zocalo of Mexico City-- the irreverent
Luis Gonzalez de la Alba added a devestating
postscript in his weekly La Jornada column:
"The fall and destruction of Tenochtitlan
which we celebrate [sic] tomorrow was the result of
a popular and multitudinous uprising of all
the nations between Veracruz and this city, against
the fierce repression of the Aztec Empire.
By 1521, the Aztecs had inflicted humiliation upon
its subject peoples with a ferocity never
achieved by the Nazis . . ."-La Jornada, August 12,
1996. -p.11
Another taste of his flavor is the following:
Several years ago when I visited Columbus,
New Mexico, memories of Villa's raid on this
quiet border outpost were fast fading. Most
of the residents were snow bunnies who had fled
to southern New Mexico to escape winters in
the frozen north. The curator of the cluttered
Pancho Villa Museum was himself a native of
Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania, from which he
had been driven by the 1979 near-meltdown
at the local nuclear power plant.
But one resident who remembered the incident
quite clearly was the former postmistress,
Margaret Epps, then in her late 70s. What
the old woman remembered best were the flames
shooting from the burning storefronts as she
trotted towards town in her father's milk wagon.
"It was awful. There were bodies in the street,"
she gasped in the kind of mechanical horror
that folks who have been telling the same
story most of their long lives affect. "That Pancho
Villa was a bad man!" -p.75
Barbarous Mexico,
Basta! Land and the Zapatista Rebellion in Chiapas, by
George A. Collier with Elizabeth
Lowery Quaratiello, 1994, The Institute for Food and Development Policy,
398 60th St, Oakland,
California 94618, USA tel:510/654-4400, (distribution by Subterranean
Co., Box 160, 265 South
5th St, Monroe, Oregon 97456, USA tel:800/274-7826).
Of course I need to do a lot more work on the bibliography.
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