Contributors Page

IF 0.2 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Latin Americanist Pub Date : 2021-12-10 DOI:10.1353/tla.2021.0028
Sarah Beckhart Coppinger, Alan McPherson, Graydon Dennison, F. O'Hara, Joshua Stern, Casey VanSise, Elizabeth Shesko, Juan Alberto Salazar Rebolledo, Jacob Blanc, E. Costa, Clayton Oppenhuizen, Jason H. Dormady, Travis Knoll, J. Barefoot
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Abstract

Abstract:This essay is an investigation into the Tlatelolco Housing Project and the complexity of Mexican modernity. The completion of the project in 1964 was meant to represent the culmination of modernity. Ironically, the depiction of modernity was also the tool of repression in the student massacre in 1968, and thus the end of modernity. As such, this is an investigation into the Mexican Miracle and the state project of modernization, and the role of the modernist movement not only in the Mexican Revolutionary project, but also in architecture. At the same time, the Tlatelolco Housing Project is an exploration into Mexican state representations of national identity, and Mexican citizens perceptions of Mexicanidad. My project draws from a variety of primary and secondary sources, from state and national archives, architectural journals, and the Mexican census board. This project also involves the examination of pamphlets, newspapers, photographs, blogs, and magazine articles, to grasp how Mexicans understood the state project of modernization, and problems of urban growth.
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摘要:本文考察了特拉特洛尔科住房项目和墨西哥现代性的复杂性。该项目于1964年竣工,旨在代表现代性的顶峰。具有讽刺意味的是,对现代性的描绘也是1968年学生大屠杀中镇压的工具,从而终结了现代性。因此,这是对墨西哥奇迹和国家现代化项目的调查,以及现代主义运动不仅在墨西哥革命项目中,而且在建筑中的作用。与此同时,特拉特洛尔科住房项目是对墨西哥国家对国家身份的代表以及墨西哥公民对墨西哥人的看法的探索。我的项目来源于各种主要和次要来源,包括州和国家档案馆、建筑期刊和墨西哥人口普查委员会。该项目还包括检查小册子、报纸、照片、博客和杂志文章,以了解墨西哥人如何理解国家现代化项目和城市发展问题。
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来源期刊
Latin Americanist
Latin Americanist HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
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发文量
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