

An edition of The power of God against the guns of government (1998)
religious upheaval in Mexico at the turn of the nineteenth century
By Paul J. Vanderwood
Publish Date
1998
Publisher
Stanford University Press
Language
eng
Pages
409
Description:
"Writing in a narrative style reminiscent of Womack's Zapata and the Mexican Revolution, author explains a series of 1890s uprisings in Tomóchic, in the border state of Chihuahua, against the Porfirians' determination to dictate who would control the land and the future. Pushed forward by the belief in folk saint Teresa Urrea, indigenous people and mestizos led by Cruz Chávez fought government troops to preserve their way of life. Surprisingly, author makes no mention of another such movement in Brazil occurring at the same time, which was immortalized first by Da Cunha and then by Vargas Llosa"--Handbook of Latin American Studies, v. 58.
subjects: Church and state, Church history, Government, Resistance to, History, Religion, Resistance to Government, Mexico, history, Mexico, religion, Church and state, mexico
People: Teresa Urrea
Places: Mexico, Tomóchic, Tomóchic (Mexico)
Times: 19th century