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The Cage Of Melancholy: Identity and Metamorphosis in the Mexican Culture
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The Cage Of Melancholy: Identity and Metamorphosis in the Mexican Culture Hardcover - 1992

by Bartra, Roger


From the publisher

"A wonderful and timely book. . . . Bartra brilliantly dissects the idea of 'being Mexican' upheld and imposed by the dominant forces in Mexico. But by extension, he asks readers everywhere if they recognize themselves in the national character proposed by the political elites of the U.S., France, U.S.S.R., or Nigeria. Bartra invites us all to step out of self-consciousness, take a good look at the metaphysics of 'national character' and then decide if they are true to you or to me. . . . A more relevant cultural exercise can not be proposed at this time."Carlos FuentesIn The Cage of Melancholy, Roger Bartra explores the myth of the Mexican national character, and how this myth has been used to legitimize the exploitative modern national state. Between the time of the European Conquest and the Mexican Revolution, the Mexican was viewed as a peasant who was timid, childlike, resigned, lazy, and indifferent to death. This image was modified by industrialization. The peasant became a worker who was violent, sentimental, resentful, evasive, and betrayed by modernity. In both incarnations, the Mexican is stereotyped as melancholy, as are the members of the intellectual elite who construct this image. (Bartra links this notion of melancholy with European, Romantic ideas.) As Bartra shows how the myth was constructed and why, he skillfully weaves an extraordinary comparison with an axolotl. An axolotl is an actual larva-like aquatic amphibian, swimming in the waters of Mexico, which never metamorphosizes into a salamander, as expected, and which is misunderstood by both Europeans and Mexicans as they subject it to constant scrutiny. For Bartra, the axolotl is the Mexican, always on the brink of change, always misunderstood, always melancholic. The axolotl is a mirror of the Mexican national culture. To explain the ways that the myth of the typical Mexican serves political purposes, Bartra tells us about relajo, the slackening of norms that causes disorder. Mexicans advocate relajo as a strategy of self-defense as they try to disorder the mechanisms of domination. But when relajo is institutionalized into the myth of the national spirit, it functions as a diversion that deflects protests, thus ensuring the domination of the modern state. Moreover, those who question the state are accused of renouncing the national culture. Bartra argues that "Mexicans must get rid of this imagery which oppresses our consciences and fortifies the despotic domination of the so-called Mexican Revolutionary state." Drawing from the fields of history, literature, popular culture, psychoanalysis, evolution, and biology, he challenges us to look at problems in new ways.Roger Bartra is an anthropologist and sociologist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico and the editor of La Jornada Semanal, a literary magazine.200 pp. 11 black-and-white illustrations. Cloth, $38.00ss

Details

  • Title The Cage Of Melancholy: Identity and Metamorphosis in the Mexican Culture
  • Author Bartra, Roger
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition Copyright 1992
  • Publisher Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, New Jersey, U.S.A.
  • Date 1992-02
  • ISBN 9780813517490

About the author

Roger Bartra Muri (born Mexico City, November 7, 1942) is a Mexican sociologist and anthropologist, recognized as one of the most important contemporary social scientists of his country.[1] Bartra, son of Spanish Civil War refugee writer Agust Bartra and Anna Muri, is well known for his work on Mexican identity in The Cage of Melancholy. Identity and Metamorphosis in the Mexican Character, his social theory on The Imaginary Networks of Political Power and, recently, for his anthropo-clinical theory of the "exocerebro" (exo-brain), that argues that the brain is partly constructed by its "cultural prostheses", external socio-cultural elements that complete it. Trained as an anthropologist in Mexico, Bartra earned his doctorate in sociology at La Sorbonne and he is an Emeritus Researcher at Mexicos National Autonomous University, where he has worked since 1971; in 1985 he was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship.[2] He is also Honorary Research Fellow at the Birkbeck College of the University of London.
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The Cage of Melancholy: Identity and Metamorphosis in the Mexican Character
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The Cage of Melancholy: Identity and Metamorphosis in the Mexican Character

by Roger Bartra; Translator-Christopher J. Hall

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The Cage of Melancholy: Identity and Metamorphosis in the Mexican Culture

by Bartra, Roger

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Rutgers University Press, 1992. Hardcover. Good. Missing dust jacket; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket missing. Shelf and handling wear to cover and binding, with general signs of previous use. Secure packaging for safe delivery.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed.
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The Cage of Melancholy: Identity and Metamorphosis in the Mexican Character

by Bartra, Roger

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New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1992. First edition. Hardcover. Very Good +/very good +. 8vo. xii, 200 pp. Bound in full green cloth, in cream dust jacket printed in green and brown. Translated from the Spanish by Christopher J. Hall. Black and white illustrations. Includes bibliography and index. Very Good+, previous owner's name stamped in black ink on front and rear free endpapers, minor age-toning to edges of binding, crisp and clean, in Very Good+ dust jacket with very light wear. Lovely copy.
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