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versión impresa ISSN 0185-1659
Resumen
LOMNITZ, Claudio. Cronotopos de una nación distópica: el nacimiento de la "dependencia" en México durante el Porfiriato tardío. Cuicuilco [online]. 2010, vol.17, n.48, pp.193-228. ISSN 0185-1659.
This paper develops a novel approach to anthropology and history of international borders. It proposes a typology and a phenomenological characterization of two kinds of border crossings that emerged alongside the new relationship of economic and political dependency that developed between México and the United States in the last quarter of the 19th century. The new border crossings involved the development of new 'chronotopes', in other words new and competing spatial-temporal matrices, used to frame the relationship between México and the United States. This paper analyzes the quality, nature and stakes of these alternative forms of historicity by way of a close case study of two pivotal journalistic texts: James Creelman's (1908) interview of General Porfirio Díaz, and John Kenneth Turner's (1910) reportage and exposé of Mexican slavery.