Research Catalog

The dead march : a history of the Mexican-American War / Peter Guardino.

Title
The dead march : a history of the Mexican-American War / Peter Guardino.
Author
Guardino, Peter, 1963-
Publication
  • Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2017.
  • ©2017

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance E404 .G83 2017Off-site

Holdings

Details

Description
502 pages; 25 cm
Summary
The bloody 1846-1848 war between the United States and Mexico filled out the shape of the continental United States, forcing Mexico to recognize its loss of Texas and give up the rest of what became the Southwestern United States. Generally people argue that the United States won this war because unlike Mexico it was already a unified nation that commanded the loyalty of its citizens. Focusing on the vivid experiences of ordinary soldiers and civilians, both Americans and Mexicans, The Dead March reveals something very different. The United States won not because it was more unified but instead because it was much wealthier. Both Americans and Mexicans had complicated relationships with their nations, relationships entangled with their commitments to their religions, their neighbors, and their families. The war's events, both on the grand scale of the conflict between nations and the more intimate scale of campaigns and battles, cannot be understood without probing this social and cultural history. Politicians could not simply conjure up armies, and generals could not manipulate units as if their members were chess pieces without ideas or attitudes. This book also uses the war to compare the two countries as they existed in 1846. The results of this comparison are quite startling. The United States and Mexico were much more alike than they were different, and both nations were still in the tumultuous and often violent process of constituting themselves. What separated them was not some fabled American unity or democracy but the very real economic advantages of the United States.--
Subject
  • Mexican War (1846-1848)
  • To 1899
  • Mexican War, 1846-1848
  • Economic history
  • Economic history > Regional disparities
  • Social conditions
  • United States > Economic conditions > To 1865
  • United States > Social conditions > To 1865
  • Mexico > Economic conditions > 19th century
  • Mexico > Social conditions > 19th century
  • North America > Regional disparities. > 19th century
  • Mexico
  • North America
  • United States
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
The men most damaging to the population -- We're the boys for Mexico -- Like civilized nation -- Even the fathers of families -- Each chapter we write in Mexican blood -- The yankees died like ants -- The people of the town were firing -- Ashamed of my country -- The law of the strongest.
ISBN
  • 9780674972346
  • 0674972341
LCCN
^^2017006231
OCLC
  • 975998302
  • SCSB-11809821
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library