Bag om In the Vortex of Violence
"Conceptually cogent, profoundly researched, and persuasively written, In the Vortex of Violence appraises the political, cultural, and moral motivations behind lynching for community stakeholders. It draws readers near the pain of brutal violence and unearths its meanings for wider processes of state-making, exclusion, and domination in twentieth-century Mexico. An admirable achievement!"--Wil G. Pansters, Professor of Social and Political Anthropology of Latin America, Utrecht University "Gema Kloppe-Santamaría's study of lynching in Mexico is one of the best books I have read in recent years. In the Vortex of Violence is superbly researched and of great value to historians studying mob violence in all parts of the world. In recent years a number of scholars have studied late-twentieth-century extralegal violence in Latin America, but this book distinguishes itself by its attention to history and the enduring cultural underpinnings of collective violence. Its author is particularly deft at connecting lynching to state formation while not neglecting local attitudes toward religion and witchcraft. Most importantly, she understands the great significance of the discourse surrounding the alleged crimes at the heart of lynching cases. As a historian of the United States, I found this book constantly led me to rethink my own ideas and approaches. Anyone who has wrestled with the difficult question of how to distinguish lynching from murder should study In the Vortex of Violence."--William D. Carrigan, coauthor of Forgotten Dead: Mob Violence against Mexicans in the United States, 1848-1928"In the Vortex of Violence is an engaging and highly original foray into lynchings--a particular feature of violence that undergirds the relationship between civil society and state structures in Mexico. Gema Kloppe-Santamaría argues that we must center lynchings in our analysis of state formation to grasp the scale of impunity rampant in Mexico today. She expertly shows that the violence in contemporary Mexico has deep historical roots. The work is at once highly accessible and deeply sophisticated."--Gladys McCormick, Associate Professor in History and the Jay and Debe Moskowitz Chair in Mexico-US Relations, Syracuse University
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