In this Book

A Sentimental Education for the Working Man: The Mexico City Penny Press, 1900-1910

Book
Robert M. Buffington
2015
Published by: Duke University Press
summary
In A Sentimental Education for the Working Man Robert Buffington reconstructs the complex, shifting, and contradictory ideas about working-class masculinity in early twentieth-century Mexico City. He argues that from 1900 to 1910, the capital’s satirical penny press provided working-class readers with alternative masculine scripts that were more realistic about their lives, more responsive to their concerns, and more representative of their culture than anything proposed by elite social reformers and Porfirian officials. The penny press shared elite concerns about the destructive vices of working-class men, and urged them to be devoted husbands, responsible citizens, and diligent workers; but it also used biting satire to recast negative portrayals of working-class masculinity and to overturn established social hierarchies. In this challenge to the "macho" stereotype of working-class Mexican men, Buffington shows how the penny press contributed to the formation of working-class consciousness, facilitated the imagining of a Mexican national community, and validated working-class men as modern citizens.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title, Copyright

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v-vi

Acknowledgments

pp. vii-x

Introduction

pp. 1-34

1: Working-Class Heroes

pp. 35-66

2: The One True Juarez

pp. 67-100

3: The Apotheosis of the Working Man

pp. 101-138

4: Rumbo Perdido: Transgressive Journeys into Manhood

pp. 139-168

5: Don Juan and the Troubled Birth of Modern Love

pp. 169-212

Epilogue: Las Trampas Modernas

pp. 213-220

Notes

pp. 221-270

Bibliography

pp. 271-286

Index

pp. 287-294
Back To Top