List of Maps
List of Tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Understanding Individual and Collective Insurrectionary Action in Independent Mexico, 1821-1876 (Will Fowler, University of St. Andrews)
Chronology of Main Events and Pronunciamientos, 1821-1876
1. The Compass Points of Unrest: Pronunciamientos from Within, Without, Above, and Below in Southeast Mexico, 1821-1876
Terry Rugeley
2. The Rise and Fall of a Regional Strongman: Felipe de la Garza’s Pronunciamiento of 1822
Catherine Andrews
3. Veracruz, the Determining Region: Military Pronunciamientos in Mexico, 1821-1843
Juan Ortiz Escamilla
4. The Clergy and How it Responded to Calls for Rebellion Before the Mid-Nineteenth Century
Anne Staples
5. José Ramón García Ugarte: Patriot, Federalist, or Malcontent?
Linda Arnold
6. Ponciano Arriaga and Mariano Ávila’s Intellectual Backing of the 14 April 1837 Pronunciamiento of San Luis Potosí
Sergio Cañedo Gamboa
7. Ayuntamientos and Pronunciamientos during the Nineteenth Century: Examples from Tlaxcala between Independence and the Reform War
Raymond Buve
8. The End of the “Catholic Nation”: Reform and Reaction in Puebla, 1854-1856
Guy P.C. Thomson
9. In Search of Power: The Pronunciamientos of General Mariano Paredes y Arrillaga
Josefina Zoraida Vázquez
10. The Pronunciamientos of Antonio López de Santa Anna, 1821-1867
Will Fowler
11. Intervention and Empire: Politics as Usual?
Erika Pani
12. A Socialist Pronunciamiento: Julio López Chávez’s Uprising of 1868
Eduardo Flores Clair
Bibliography
Contributors