Book Cover

Domestic Economies: Family, Work, and Welfare in Mexico City, 1884-1943

Contributor(s): Blum, Ann S (Author)

ISBN: 9780803213593

Publisher: University of Nebraska Press

Binding Types:

$30.00
$42.95 (Final Price)
$41.75 (100+ copies: $41.00)
List/retail price:
$30.00
- +
Buy

Pub Date: January 1, 2010

Dewey: 306.85097253

LCCN: 2009023607

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index, Maps, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.90" H x 8.90" L x 5.90" W ( 1.15 lbs) 396 pages

Series: Engendering Latin America

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: When Porfirio Díaz extended his modernization initiative in Mexico to the administration of public welfare, the families and especially the children of the urban poor became a government concern. Reforming the poor through work and by bolstering Mexico's emerging middle class were central to the government's goals of order and progress. But Porfirian policies linking families and work often endangered the children they were supposed to protect, especially when state welfare institutions became involved in the shadowy traffic of child labor. The Mexican Revolution, which followed, generated an unprecedented surge of social reform that was focused on families and accelerated the integration of child protection into public policy, political discourse, and private life. In ways that transcended the abrupt discontinuities and conflicts of the era, Porfirian officials, revolutionary leaders, and social reformers alike invoked idealized models of the Mexican family as the primary building block of society, making families, especially those of Mexico's working classes, the object of moralizing reform in the name of state construction and national progress. Domestic Economies: Family, Work, and Welfare in Mexico City, 1884-1943 analyzes family practices and class formation in modern Mexico by examining the ways in which family-oriented public policies and institutions affected cross-class interactions as well as relations between parents and children.

Review Quotes: "Blum's work is a major contribution to the nascent field of childhood history in Latin America. She draws from the historiography of gender and welfare to reflect how class, race, and gender interplayed in defining family relations and nation-state formation in modern Mexico."--Sandra Aguilar, H-Net

Worth Considering
Product successfully added to cart!