Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Shadows of modernity
- I Theoretical explorations
- II State-building and ethnic conflict
- 4 Who owns the state? Ethnic conflicts after the end of empires
- 5 Nationalism and ethnic mobilisation in Mexico
- 6 From empire to ethnocracy: Iraq since the Ottomans
- III The politics of exclusion in nationalised states
- References
- Index
5 - Nationalism and ethnic mobilisation in Mexico
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Shadows of modernity
- I Theoretical explorations
- II State-building and ethnic conflict
- 4 Who owns the state? Ethnic conflicts after the end of empires
- 5 Nationalism and ethnic mobilisation in Mexico
- 6 From empire to ethnocracy: Iraq since the Ottomans
- III The politics of exclusion in nationalised states
- References
- Index
Summary
On New Year's Day 1994, Subcommandante Marcos stepped out of the Lacandon forest and made his first public statements, surrounded by masked men in guerrilla uniforms armed with rifles. He declared that they were the heirs of the Mexican revolution, determined to continue the struggle against the forces of imperialism and to give a final blow to the bourgeois regime that had corrupted the ideals of the revolution. And indeed, the Zapatistas could draw on the support of the peasant organisations who had struggled, since the middle of the seventies, against the monopolisation of land and power by a small elite from Tuxtla Gutiérrez and San Cristóbal (Wimmer 1995c; Harvey 1998).
One year later, however, the Zapatista army fought for the cultural and political rights of the indigenous peoples of Mexico, for political autonomy of their communities and the official recognition of their culture – a considerable shift of discourse, well received by the national and international audience of NGOs, intellectuals and anti-globalisation groups for whom Marcos and his followers became heroes of the same quasi-mythical stature as Che Guevara. As it seems, the widespread support for indigenous rights and multicultural justice had led the insurgents to present themselves as an Indian uprising rather than a peasant revolution. The issues of land and power, central to the guerrilla movements of the seventies and eighties, have been relegated to the bottom of the political agenda.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Nationalist Exclusion and Ethnic ConflictShadows of Modernity, pp. 114 - 155Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002