In only a few decades during the seventeenth century, the Spanish American colonial city of Potosí, in modern-day Bolivia, grew from a small settlement to a metropolis of almost 200,000. With twice the total population of all of Britain's North American colonies, Potosí became one of the largest cities in the Americas despite being at an elevation of over 13,000 feet.| Not Even Past
Camilla Ordorica reviews Susie S. Porter's From Angel to Office Worker, which explores the material conditions of working women between 1890 and 1950 and the consequent formation of middle-class female identity in Mexico City| Not Even Past
What would Mexico City—or Tenochtitan as it was known to its indigenous population—have looked like to ten year old Doña Luisa Estrada, when she arrived with her parents in 1524, three years after it fell to Spain?| Not Even Past
We need new men, normal children, strong workers, and loyal soldiers . . . , and much of this can be achieved by cultivating Mexican women, showing them horizons that they have not contemplated. -Dr. Carmen Alarcón, 1942[1] In 1922, socialist feminists such as Elvia Carrillo Puerto and Esperanza Velázquez Bringas organized eugenic campaigns promoting […]| Not Even Past
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