Skip to product information
1 of 1

The Bajío Revolution: Remaking Capitalism, Community, and Patriarchy in Mexico, North America, and the World - Paperback

The Bajío Revolution: Remaking Capitalism, Community, and Patriarchy in Mexico, North America, and the World - Paperback

Regular price $66.01 USD
Regular price Sale price $66.01 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Shipping: $8.00 or FREE when you spend $100+

Quantity

by John Tutino (Author)

In The Bajío Revolution, John Tutino examines how popular insurgents reshaped Mexico, the United States, and global capitalism during the nineteenth century. After detailing New Spain's silver-driven wealth, Tutino shows how the Bajío insurgency of 1810-20 broke silver flows and Asian trades, opening markets to industrial cloth made in England from cotton made by enslaved hands in the US South-while Bajío women claimed pivotal roles making maize to sustain families and guerrilla bands. As Mexico gained independence in 1821, mining remained broken while family growers held strong. Then, in the 1830s, a new silver-industrial capitalism fed by family maize makers rose in the Bajío. Women still led rural families and took on mill labor; one woman became Mexico's leading silver capitalist. Facing that competition, in the 1840s the United States invaded to claim Texas for cotton and slavery and California for gold. The new Mexican capitalism carried on until the United States mobilized gold taken in war to join a global gold standard in the 1870s-blocking Mexico's independent route to capitalism.

Author Biography

John Tutino is Professor of History at Georgetown University, author of Making a New World: Founding Capitalism in the Bajío and Spanish North America, and editor of New Countries: Capitalism, Revolutions, and Nations in the Americas, 1750-1870, both also published by Duke University Press.

Number of Pages: 568
Dimensions: 1.26 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: August 22, 2025
View full details