Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Damned and the Venerated: The Memory, Commemoration, and the Representation of the Nineteenth-Century Mexican Pronunciamiento, Will Fowler
Chronology of Main Events and Pronunciamientos, 1821-1910
1. The Memory and Representation of Rafael del Riego’s Pronunciamiento in Constitutional New Spain and within the Iturbide Movement, 1820-1821, Rodrigo Moreno Gutiérrez
2. The Damned Man with the Venerated Plan: The Complex Legacies of Agustín de Iturbide and the Iguala Plan, Richard A. Warren
3. Refrescos, Iluminaciones and Te Deums: Celebrating Pronunciamientos in Jalisco in 1823 and 1832, Rosie Doyle
4. The Political Life of Executed Pronunciados. The Representation and Memory of José Márquez and Joaquín Gárate’s 1830 Pronunciamiento of San Luis, Kerry McDonald
5. Memory and Manipulation: The Lost Cause of the Santiago Imán Pronunciamiento, Shara Ali
6. Salvas, Cañonazos y Repiques: Celebrating the Pronunciamiento during the U.S.-Mexican War, Pedro Santoni
7. Contemporary Verdicts on the Pronunciamiento during the Early National Period, Melissa Boyd
8. The Crumbling of a “Hero.” Ignacio Comonfort from Ayutla to Tacubaya, Antonia Pi-Suñer Llorens
9. Porfirio Díaz and the Representations of the Second of April, Verónica Zárate Toscano
10. Juan Bustamante’s Pronunciamiento and the Civic Speeches That Condemned It. San Luis Potosí, 1868-1869, Flor de María Salazar Mendoza
11. “As Empty a Piece of Gasconading Stuff As I Have Ever Read”: The Pronunciamiento through Foreign Eyes, Will Fowler
Bibliography
Contributors