<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><i>Waking from the Dream</i> explains how the Mexican middle classes transformed their country after 1968, as the once-touted economic Miracle was replaced by new ideas of capitalism and the once-powerful Party of the Institutional Revolution was swept away by electoral democracy.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><i>Waking from the Dream</i> explains how the Mexican middle classes transformed their country after 1968, as the once-touted economic "Miracle" was replaced by new ideas of capitalism and the once-powerful Party of the Institutional Revolution was swept away by electoral democracy.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>Waking from the Dream</i> adds an important layer to the study of the urban middle class in post-revolutionary Mexico . . . <i>Waking from the Dream</i> provides a welcome addition to the study of urban Mexico.--Melixa Abad Izquierdo "<i>Canadian Journal of History</i>"<br><br>[Walker] has spent a decade accumulating an extraordinarily broad range of resources, including excellent archival sources, documented in some fifty plus pages of notes, which incorporate additional insights worth perusing. She has discovered useful interpretations about government agents, as well as their revealing observations over time. Many of her examples include direct quotes from middle class Mexicans who are presented in a variety of contexts during this period, adding color and veracity to her arguments . . . [A]ny scholar of Latin America interested in the role of the middle classes will benefit significantly from both her methodology and her findings in this objective analysis of a neglected but influential topic in twentieth-century history.--Roderic Ai Camp "<i>American Historical Review</i>"<br><br>A very lively and most interesting read, on a topic which has received a disgraceful lack of attention--the author taps a rich new vein.--Barry Carr "La Trobe University and ANCLAS: Australian National University"<br><br>In a creatively researched, pathbreaking study, she contends that the middle classes were both the barometer to measure the success and then decline of the postrevolutionary agenda of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), and the protagonists of late-20th-century Mexican history.--S. F. Voss "<i>CHOICE</i>"<br><br>Louise Walker presents an evocative and highly informative study of the middle classes during several decades of economic and political crisis and upheaval in Mexico . . . [<i>Waking from the Dream</i>] invites critical conversations about the middle class in Latin America, histories of neoliberalism, and class formation. Now that we are rethinking the second half of the twentieth century in Latin America, undergraduate and graduate students alike would be wise to read carefully this book.--Ricardo López "<i>Histoire sociale/Social History</i>"<br><br>This is an important work. Walker makes careful use of her sources to explain carefully how and why activism increased in the middle class during the late 20th century.--Linda B. Hall "University of New Mexico"<br><br>This [is a] valuable contribution to ethnographic understanding of middle classes in latter 20th century Mexico . . . Walker argues convincingly that scholarly bias to exclusively study leftist politics creates not only omissions, but distortions. This work offers compelling support for her argument that the Mexican middle classes need to be viewed as heterogeneous, and as full political, economic and social agents who are capable of creating important effects in the nation. Walker's comprehensive coverage enables readers without knowledge of Mexico to get a fuller sense of the political, economic, and social landscape . . . This study analyzes recent Mexican history in depth and breadth, and with vigor and creativity.--Maureen O'Dougherty "<i>The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology</i>"<br><br>Walker's work should point the way for a great deal of research in the years to come.--Alexander Dawson "<i> The Americas: A Quarterly Review of Latin American History </i>"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Louise E. Walker is Associate Professor of History at Northeastern University.
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