Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 346
978-1-4422-2945-7 • eBook • October 2013 • $39.00 • (£30.00)
Adam David Morton is professor of political economy in the Department of Political Economy at the University of Sydney.
Introduction: Coordinates of Revolution, State, and Uneven Development in Modern Mexico
Part I: Constructing Revolution and State in Modern Mexico
Chapter 1: Mexican Revolution, Primitive Accumulation Passive Revolution
Chapter 2: Capital Accumulation, State Formation, and Import Substitution Industrialization
Chapter 3: Neoliberalism and Structural Change within the Global Political Economy of Uneven Development
Part II: Contesting Revolution and State in Modern Mexico
Chapter 4: Intellectuals and the State: A Critical Social Function or in the Shadow of the State?
Chapter 5: The Political Economy of Democratization and Democratic Transition
Chapter 6: Uneven Agrarian Development and the Resistance of the EZLN
Conclusion: Permanent Passive Revolution?
Epilogue: Telescoping Passive Revolution
Bibliography
In Giuseppe di Lampedusa’s classic novel The Leopard, the character of the Sicilian nobleman during the Risorgimento observes, 'If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change.' This insight of the fictional character on the cusp of major social change illustrates the Gramscian concept of passive revolution, which is at the core of Adam David Morton’s intellectually ambitious and stimulating work, Revolution and State in Modern Mexico. . . . [The book] makes several significant contributions to debates on Mexican historiography. . . . This bold application of historical sociology will be an important reference for understanding post-Revolutionary Mexico. The construct of passive revolution is also useful beyond the Mexican case to highlight the contradictions of 'post-neoliberalism' in twenty-first-century Latin America.
— Richard Stahler-Sholk, Eastern Michigan University; Bulletin of Latin American Research
Adam Morton has produced a study that is nothing short of seminal. . . . Revolution and State in Modern Mexico combines theoretical sophistication and innovation with a thoroughgoing understanding of empirical complexities in an analysis that, when it comes time to construct a canon of Marxist historical sociology, will sit comfortably and appropriately among the classics whose insights it draws on and to whose legacy it contributes.
— Alf Gunvald Nilsen, author of Adivasis and the State; Capital & Class
The work of Adam Morton in Revolution and State in Modern Mexico is of utmost importance. This is solid research, well documented and purposeful. These attributes make it a must reference for Gramscian studies, international relations, and the historical sociology of modernization in Mexico. The detail and rigor with which Morton addresses his subject matter is no less important. The result is the mobilization of a great deal of evidence to support his arguments
— Emilio Allier Montaño; Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales
Revolution and State in Modern Mexico constitutes perhaps the contribution on transitions to and experiences of capitalism in Mexico, and it will be of lasting significance beyond the empirical confines of the book—not least because of the growing interest in Latin American countries among IPE scholars.
— Panel of judges, International Political Economy Group (IPEG) Book Prize of the British International Studies Association
This is a work of remarkable erudition in which Adam Morton brings fresh perspectives to our understanding of the Mexican Revolution and its aftermath, employing Antonio Gramsci’s concept of 'passive revolution' to explain how and why dependent capitalist development and neoliberalism took the form they did in Mexico. In a sweeping interdisciplinary survey, Morton draws on interviews with economic elites, politicians, state functionaries, and public intellectuals. Above all, he engages with theorists who consider not only state formation but also the roles of popular culture, literature, and spatial relations as expressed in architecture, city planning, and public art. As telling examples, Morton provides a study of the 'social function' of the novelist Carlos Fuentes as a 'mixture of critical opposition and accommodation' to passive revolution and of the Zapatistas as a counter-space of resistance—however imperfect—to passive revolution. Along with much else in this audacious book, these two studies give readers stimulating material with which to agree and disagree.
— Judith Adler Hellman, author of The World of Mexican Migrants
Adam Morton has produced an exceptional work in radical historicism on postrevolutionary Mexico and a virtuoso’s exposition of Antonio Gramsci’s theory of hegemony, passive revolution, and uneven development. His ambitious and successful undertaking delivers a highly nuanced understanding of postrevolutionary Mexican history intertwined with an analysis of the passive revolution of capital on a world scale. Weaving theory and history throughout, Morton engages a wide range of scholarly debates about the state, postcolonialism, democratization, and resistance. This book will be a must-read in the fields of Mexican and Latin American studies and provides a provocative and contrasting interpretation to mainstream 'transition studies' in political science. It converses with and provides a welcome contribution to the most prominent strands in historical sociology—the sociology of power, international political economy, and geography.
— Gerardo Otero, Simon Fraser University, author of Farewell to the Peasantry
Drawing on classics of Marxist social theory, Adam Morton skilfully interweaves theory and history to reveal the dynamic of state intervention from above and mass mobilization from below that shaped the modern state and capitalist social relations in post-revolution Mexico. He provides fresh insight into how the process of revolutionary rupture and conservative restoration was initiated and reproduced in the absence of bourgeois hegemony, which took distinct forms in the immediate aftermath of the Mexican revolution and subsequently. Morton also provides a provocative analysis of the literary and political work of Carlos Fuentes; a discussion of the specificity of Mexico's political transition to a form of bourgeois democracy congruent with capitalist social relations; and an assessment of the rise and endurance of the EZLN that has provided a catalyst for resistance to neoliberalism in Mexico as well as other parts of the world. Morton has produced a very important and impressive study that advances both theoretical analysis and our understanding of the economic, cultural, political, and social dynamics of contemporary Mexico.
— Nora Hamilton, author of Mexico: Political, Social and Economic Evolution
• Winner, 2012 International Political Economy Group (IPEG) Book Prize of the British International Studies Association