In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

vii . Maps, Illustrations, and Figures , Maps Map of region covered by study 8 Illustrations illustration 1. View of Tapalpa’s main street from the steps of the parish church looking toward the tower of the municipal presidency, 2005 5 illustration 2. My landlady Teresa with sisters, nieces, and nephews, chopping fruit to blend into yogurt in her kitchen, 2005 6 illustration 3. Cristero soldiers in the Sierra de Tapalpa, circa 1928 9 illustration 4. View of Atacco from the churchyard looking toward the primary school built on top of the original plaza, and the central block of houses, 2005 11 illustration 5. Municipal chronicler José Fajardo, giving the diploma in regional history class in Tapalpa, 2005 22 illustration 6. View of Atacco from the ruined chapel across the churchyard where church is in session, with the bandstand on the left that Federico’s group had helped to build, and the central block of houses in the distance, 2005 38 illustration 7. El Tacamo, a rancho (village) in the hills to the west of Tapalpa, 2004 39 illustration 8. One of the grassy mounds of Pueblo Viejo, 2004 49 viii maps, illustrations, and figures illustration 9. Andrés contemplates the pool, now abandoned, in which (mainly wealthy) families from Atacco and Tapalpa once bathed on Sundays, 2005 50 illustration 10. The novelist Juan Rulfo, 1966 64 illustration 11. Selling “typical” sweets and drinks to weekenders in the portal of Tapalpa’s plaza, 2004 65 illustration 12. The late don Chilo, to whom weekenders were referred, in his cantina in Tapalpa, 2007 67 illustration 13. Presentation of books on Tapalpa in the Hilton Hotel, Guadalajara, 2005 69 illustration 14. Tapalpans chatting and watching a video of the Tapalpan festival in “La Coahuila” apartment, Concord, California, 1998 72 illustration 15. Corner of the main square of Concord, California, 1998 73 illustration 16. Mural in the entrance to Tapalpan municipal library, bearing faces of some hijos ilustres, 1999 76 illustration 17. Independence Day parade in Tapalpa, 1999 83 illustration 18. Revolution Day parade in Tapalpa, 1999 83 illustration 19. Float in Independence Day parade in Tapalpa, 1999 87 illustration 20. Procession in honor of the Virgin de Guadalupe in Tapalpa’s patron festival, 1999 92 illustration 21. Poster of the Virgin of Defense’s annual visit to Tapalpa, 2004 96 illustration 22. The Virgin of Defense in procession from Juanacatlán to Tapalpa for her annual visit, 2005 97 illustration 23. Presentation of Martín González’s history in the ex-parish church, now the municipal cultural forum, 2005 102 [3.142.171.180] Project MUSE (2024-04-19 17:38 GMT) ix maps, illustrations, and figures illustration 24. Tombs of the hacienda owner, Vidal Vizcaíno, buried in 1902 next to his first wife, in the Purisima Chapel, 2005 115 illustration 25. Vidal Vizcaíno’s son contemplates the Hacienda de Buenavista in ruins before its demolition in the 1960s 121 illustration 26. View of the location of the old Hacienda de Buenavista from La Villa bar in the corner of Tapalpa’s plaza, 2005 121 illustration 27. A cart, hauled by oxen, bearing the name Hacienda de Buenavista, 1999 122 illustration 28. The municipal council marching in the Independence Day parade in Talapa, 1999 127 illustration 29. Visitors being shown around an old house, run by a local historical association, in the vicinity of Concord, California, 2008 142 Figures figure 1. Ethnicity in Tapalpa’s history in the 1879 survey 118 figure 2. Ethnicity in Tapalpa’s history as told in 1992–2005 118 figure 3. Dominant view of Mexican society in the nineteenth century 118 figure 4. Dominant view of Mexican society after the Revolution 118 ...

Share