Posts com a Tag ‘Poder político’
Rules and Rituals in Medieval Power Games. A German Perspective – ALTHOFF (FR)
Gerd Althoff /
ALTHOFF, Gerd. Rules and Rituals in Medieval Power Games. A German Perspective. Leiden (Brill Academic Publishers) 2019. 282p. Resenha de: HUFFMAN, Joseph P. Francia-Recensio, Paris, v.4, 2020.
This collection of 15 articles from the prolific opus of Gerd Althoff represents yet another effort to provide Anglophone scholars access to his seminal concept of »Spielregeln« or »rules of the game« in the power politics of the East Frankish-German realm during the Ottonian, Salian, and early Hohenstaufen dynasties (ca. 800–1200). The volume is therefore designed to provide some German-language historiography on the »pre-state society« of medieval Germany. Yet since three of the articles are previously unpublished English-language conference papers (Oxford in 2005, Durham in 2015, and Rome in 2016) and another three of the articles had already been published in English elsewhere, only nine (or 60%) of this volume’s articles are peer-reviewed Althoff scholarship newly available in English. And as in all such reprint editions of scholarly articles and conference papers, there is much redundancy, periodic thinly sourced assertions, and an ex post facto opportunity to address his critics.
Nonetheless, this volume is a welcome contribution. Gerd Althoff is a major German historian of the early Middle Ages whose generation of scholars developed a new perspective on German political history. As a whole, they overturned long-held certitudes about an easily discerned formation and disintegration of a medieval German Staat (nation state), and replaced this Deutsche Kaiserzeit historiography with one that »others« medieval German society. The early medieval German kingdom appears instead to be an unfamiliar »pre-state society« with mentalities, beliefs, customs, and institutions that are actually quite foreign to the modern world of nation states and national historiographies. Indeed, medieval German society followed entirely different political rules than today. From an Anglophone (and French) perspective, one could describe this as a German version of the »cultural turn«, in which politics are no longer understood through the lens of legal historians and their constitutional preoccupations but rather through the lens of social and cultural phenomena.
As Althoff himself recognizes in the preface, even this late-20th-century historiographical movement has become historical, being now increasingly overshadowed by new turns toward trans-cultural and global historiographies. Yet he rightly sees a common thread between his generation’s cultural turn historiography and the new post-cultural-turn historiography: both have replaced nationalistic concepts of history by rewriting parts of Germany’s national history as social and cultural formations. And so for Althoff the origins of the medieval German kingdom are not to be found in constitutions and legal codes, but rather in the cultural code of conduct – the »rules of the game« – for power politics and political communication among its monarchs, aristocracy, and princely churchmen1. The articles in this volume therefore serve as a retrospective reiteration of the Spielregeln thesis, illustrated with studies of various illustrative passages in medieval German chronicles and letter collections. The volume is ordered with the following themes:
Part I: Rules
Part II: Rituals
Part III: Gregorian Revolution
Part IV: History in Literature
Part I begins with a fulsome reiteration of the Spielregeln thesis. Though not as explicit »rules« in the sense of games like chess or a sport, medieval German noble society still maintained and implicitly understood a set of cultural norms for power politics and the public communication of that power. These norms were never fixed in written or governmental forms any more than clothing style or good manners or deportment; rather, they were taught and sustained in oral communication. Such Spielregeln were more important for the maintenance of order in medieval society than in contemporary western society, as the latter contains a comprehensive, written legal basis for political gaming (i. e. constitutions) which are fully sanctioned by the power of the modern nation-state. Medieval German nobles instead held their society together with rules that reinforced trust through rituals of kinship, friendship, and status affirmation (i. e. rank and honor). Such Spielregeln were adaptable enough to be used not only to resolve conflicts but also to extend into novel conundrums by a process of collective counsel and judgment. Finally, the historian can discern the Spielregeln through rituals, accounts of which survive in chronicle sources and letter collections. And though these accounts are literary constructions, Althoff fully embraces them as »reliable evidence« since his focus is on the cultural norms themselves instead of the factual veracity of the narrative accounts. Again, this is cultural history, not narrative political history of events2.
Part II considers the rules of the game themselves, best expressed in rituals serving as a vehicle for symbolic communication of political acts which maintained or restored public order. Rituals therefore did not so much illustrate already existing reality, but rather they created it themselves by their performance. Such public performances at court reinforced and protected the order of rank (e. g. seating at table, order in processions, proximity to those with power – political or sacral). The fusion of noble warrior culture and Christian values were thus expressed in the code of chivalry, filled as it was with ritual acts and gestures of virtue (e. g. humiliatio, clementia) defined by the unspoken Spielregeln.
The articles in Part II catalog the core purposes inherent in the unwritten rules or code of Spielregeln: regulation of the use of violence (both royal and noble); regulation of royal mercy and restoration of friendship as a means of preserving noble rank; regulation of conflict resolution through satisfactio and deditio to restore wounded honor; regulation of secret and/or open colloquia through familiares who lobbied for peaceful solutions acceptable to all; the evolving regulation of bishops from mediators to arbitrators between monarch and nobility. In essence, the Spielregeln provided a means to resolve conflict and preserve rank in order to save the honor of all – both those whose honor had been wounded as well as the peaceful return of those who had wounded. A peaceful equilibrium within the nobility was the ultimate goal of the Spielregeln.
Part III provides studies of specific rituals themselves that inscribed the reality of the long-for peace and restoration of rank. These included participation in convivia (public feasting together) as moments of bonding and alliance fashioning through ritual gestures and non-verbal signs (from smiles to eye contact) as well as verbal negotiations; the ritual of surrender (deditio) with all its theatrical expression of self-accusation and pleading for mercy (e. g. rent clothing, arriving barefoot, sometimes carrying a switch or sword for punishment), prostration; the equally theatrical ritual of pardon after deditio with its raising up of the prostrate penitent (with varying degrees of mercy thereafter); rituals of clementia, misericordia, and iustitia preceding the coronation ceremony of a king; the ritual of gift-giving with theatrical expressions of both honor and reciprocity (we find here the origins of wrapped gifts). We are reminded that in all these acts and gestures, »He who dominated the rituals also mastered the scene« (p. 111). Indeed, Althoff rejects the social scientific analyses of Weber, Habermas, Cassirer and others that rituals were »empty«, »dim«, and »irrational« cultural expressions. Rather, he sees elaborate staging and scripting of rituals with specific, rational acts tailored to specific needs of the moment (though again, there are no surviving accounts of such pre-event staging or scripting negotiations behind the scenes). Just how staged or spontaneous a particular ritual act was still remains a debated point though, since its performance unavoidably allowed for personal agency and »upstaging« others.
Such public rituals took on the cast of legally binding events (not unlike a marriage), as an audience had witnessed the ritual and its attendant gestures, words, and acts. No need for written documentation here, though by the 13th century such was indeed sought as a memorializing of the ritual (e. g. alliances of amicitia). In spite of this development, Althoff still concludes that »Ritual behavior had the same function and created the same obligations as an oath or a written treaty« (p. 141). Such public rituals have the hegemonic power to enable cross-cultural communication, as evidenced by the Polish and Bohemian nobility; yet what seems to have been missed here is that these Slavic communities had recently been Christianized and so had learned cultural cues of Christian Saxons and Bavarians. Other non-Christian Slavic peoples were not invited to participate in such cross-cultural communication in an effort to bind ethnic communities together in alliances and marriages.
Althoff’s final article in this section addresses the critical issue of the ambiguity of symbolic actions. Though rituals and symbols can and were interpreted differently by observers, there is no evidence anywhere that medieval folk felt this ambiguity was a problem; indeed, ambiguity provided the space necessary to establish a broad enough consensus to enable peace and to restore broken bonds between the powerful. Only when written documents from the mid-12th century onward demanded increasing specificity was this interpersonal space of ambiguity compromised and a formal governmental negotiating process entered into the ambiguous space with notions of diplomacy as a conversation of government power.
Part IV takes a major departure from the core theme of the volume, with its focus made clear in the title »Gregorian Revolution«. Here Althoff provides three articles exploring and explaining the radical Gregorian agenda (a preoccupation of German historians since Gerd Tellenbach), from the use of biblical texts as justification for Gregory VII’s claims to obedience of all bishops and monarchs, to the appearance and contested resilience of said claims in subsequent canon law collections (the libelli de lite as the primary conduit), to subsequent papal use of Gregorian claims (again not entirely unchallenged) to justify papal use of violence on behalf of the Church »to pursue their interests« (e. g. to call crusades and to punish recalcitrant kings, schismatics, and heretics). How these articles advance the volume’s avowed study of German noble Spielregeln remains unclear except to give the volume the needed size for publication.
Equally puzzling, though more rewarding, are the articles in Part V. This concluding set of two essays were originally published in German literary studies. Here we see the by now obvious affinity of Althoff’s cultural history approach to chronicle and letter narratives with the narratological and poetics of literary scholars. In the first essay Althoff poses the question, »Do Poets Play with the Rules of Society?« and concludes that indeed they do for dramatic narrative or poetic purposes. Here he considers literary fiction like the »Ruodlieb« and the »Nibelungenlied« as a »broader source base« for historiographical purposes. In the second article he assesses the fictive poem of Duke Ernst and his violent breach of the Spielregeln in an attempt to assassinate a rather tyrannical version of the emperor Otto I.
Then Otto himself breaks the rules of the game by publicly repenting of his harshness toward the duke once Ernst returns seeking restoration after years away on a crusading pilgrimage. What is most salient in Althoff’s analysis, however, is not an analysis of the literary work itself, but his assertion that – in real history – this peculiar poem had been sponsored by the bishop of Bamberg in 1208 just after the actual assassination there of the Hohenstaufen king Philip (of Swabia) by Count Palatine Otto of Wittelsbach. The poem appears to have been an episcopal attempt to legitimate the regicide of a tyrant. The line between literary fiction and historical reality remains smudgy in this section of the volume.
The inclusion of literary fiction as a source for the historical study of unwritten Spielregeln in actual noble society begs the perennial question inherent in Althoff’s thesis. How do we know if the chroniclers of noble rituals have played with them in the same fashion as the poets, and for the same type of rhetorical or political effects? Are we in fact observing actual Spielregeln at work in rituals, or are we reading a literary representation of them by chroniclers with an ulterior purpose in mind? In this volume and generally in all his individual articles Althoff does not systematically present a set of codified political rules as a coherent subject of historical study, but he has instead presented them as evocative yet incompletely unpacked vignettes of intriguing themes.
To his credit, Althoff acknowledges the unavoidable conditional clause for his entire source analysis methodology: »if the representations of many [chronicle] authors are not totally misleading« (p. 115). He then addresses Johannes Fried’s same critique of his methodology (one of many disputes between the two historians over the years), by concluding: »After much discussion about this question I here and now contend, without repeating the arguments for the position, that little or nothing speaks for the assumption that the world of descriptions should be fundamentally different from the world of real customs of communication« (p. 115).
But elsewhere he concedes much less confidently, »It may be doubtful that the [chronicle] authors describe the scenes as they happened, although it is not possible to prove this one way or another. Nevertheless, the stories told by medieval authors can be used in our questions about the forms and functions of public communication, because the authors telling these stories had to consider the common rules and customs governing behavior if they wanted their contemporaries to believe them. […] On the whole, the description had to correspond to the usual practices of communication. These stories can be used for the investigation of these practices, but not for the history of events« (p. 142). So for Althoff’s cultural history, the method serves only a formal analysis of political rules with the goal being »to strive to regain the point of view from which medieval contemporaries looked at ritual. This is a necessary first step, after which we should of course add our own evaluation« (p. 142).
Whether historians, Anglophone or otherwise, will be satisfied with relying on chronicle and letter narratives as sources for a narrowly crafted cultural history of the social history of medieval political history will depend on the type of history they prefer to pursue. The Spielregeln thesis is a fascinating starting point for navigating parts further removed, yet the fundamental source analysis of the discipline of history is different in kind from analysis of literary fiction and for good reason. Yet the value of the cultural turn as found in the work of Gerd Althoff and his generation of historians has provided a signal service – most especially in German historiography – of separating medieval German history from the awfully destructive legacy of an intense nationalistic modern historiography centered on the German state. For helping provide this specific »German Perspective« we are in his debt and can appreciate the import of this volume in his honor. Still to be done is testing the Spielregeln thesis beyond medieval Germany through a comparative study of other European kingdoms and their noble societies and cultures, both before and after the dawn of administrative kingship in the 12th century.
[Notas]1 His Spielregeln thesis first emerged in the last chapter of: Gerd Althoff, Verwandte, Freunde und Getreue. Zum politischen Stellenwert der Gruppenbindungen im früheren Mittelalter, Darmstadt 1990, translated into English by Christopher Carroll: Family, Friends, and Followers. Political and Social Bonds in Early Medieval Europe, Cambridge 2004. It was then more fully articulated in: Gerd Althoff,Spielregeln der Politik im Mittelalter: Kommunikation in Frieden und Fehde, Darmstadt 1997; 2nd ed. 2014 – a collection of eleven papers and conference papers delivered between 1989–1996. Althoff then explored the historiographical implications of Spielgregeln in medieval political chronicles in his monograph: Inszenierte Herrschaft. Geschichtsschreibung und politisches Handeln im Mittelalter,Darmstadt 2003. He also applied this Spielregeln thesis to his analysis of the emperor Otto III in his biography: Otto III., Darmstadt 1996 (Gestalten des Mittelalters und der Renaissance); translated into English by Phyllis G. Jestice: Otto III, University Park 2003.
2 This thesis has sparked a controversial international discussion, and many have been the objections to this loosely defined »know it when you see it« anthropological methodology. See for example: Johannes Fried, Wissenschaft und Phantasie. Das Beispiel der Geschichte, in: Historische Zeitschrift 263 (1996), p. 291–316; Philippe Buc, The Dangers of Ritual. Between Early Medieval Texts and Social Scientific Theory, Princeton 2001; Warren Brown, The Use of Norms in Disputes in Early Medieval Bavaria, in: Viator 30 (1999), p. 15–40; and id., Violence in Medieval Europe, Harlow 2011, p. 137–139.
Joseph P. Huffman – Mechanicsburg, PA.
[IF]Quem governa o mundo? | Noam Chomsky
Noam Chomsky, nascido em 1928, na Filadélfia, é linguista, filósofo, cientista, comentador e ativista político. Doutor pela Universidade de Harvard e professor emérito em Linguística pelo Instituto de Tecnologia de Massachusetts, se destaca pelo ativismo contra a guerra do Vietnã, como se pode constatar em uma outra obra chamada “O poder americano e os novos mandarins”, publicada no ano de 1969, a qual avalia a intervenção norte americana na Ásia.
Conhecido desde a década de 1960 por frequentar o debate acadêmico sobre temas políticos, possui forte teor crítico em relação às políticas dos Estados Unidos da América, país dito como principal impositor no discurso global. Autor da Teoria Central da Linguística que diz que os humanos possuem uma capacidade inata de linguagem embutida no cérebro, o autor mostra apreço pela comunicação. Também se destaca como “o maior intelectual da esfera pública” segundo a Observer e de acordo com o New Statesman “quem quer conhecer melhor nosso mundo tem de ler Noam Chomsky”. Leia Mais
Caricatura y poder político. Crítica, censura y represión en la ciudad de México, 1876-1888 – GANTÚS (H-Unesp)
GANTÚS, Fausta. Caricatura y poder político. Crítica, censura y represión en la ciudad de México, 1876-1888. Ciudad de México: El Colégio de México, 2009, 441 p. Resenha de COSTA, Alexandre Andrade da. Caricatura y poder político. Crítica, censura y represión en la ciudad de México, 1876-1888. História [Unesp] v.30 no.1 Franca Jan./June 2011.
O renovado interesse dos historiadores no que concerne ao estudo das imagens, tema que ganhou novo ânimo devido à transformação ocorrida no campo historiográfico a partir dos anos 1970 e 1980, torna a leitura desta obra, ainda não traduzida, mais que oportuna. Os estudos culturais que, a partir de então, tomaram as diferentes formas de mídia não mais como mecanismo de comprovação de teses previamente estabelecidas mas, principalmente, como fonte primária que poderia contribuir para a compreensão das formas de atuação dos distintos grupos no espaço público, encontraram na iconografia um manancial de problemáticas e questionamentos.
A imprensa, diferentemente do que ocorreu no Brasil, onde só foi permitida no século XIX, esteve presente na história do México desde o século XVI. Todavia, as primeiras caricaturas, tema central do livro, surgiram somente na primeira metade do século XIX, por volta de 1847. A partir de então, elas foram utilizadas pelos diversos periódicos que circulavam na capital, ora para reforçar, ora para minar o poder estabelecido.
A preocupação precípua da autora nas páginas iniciais é explicar a periodicidade e a especificidade do objeto por ela analisado: as caricaturas. No que se refere à primeira questão, o livro trata da imprensa durante a etapa tuxtepecana, de 1876 a 1888, marcada pela chegada do general Porfírio Díaz ao poder.
Fausta Gantús apresenta, no que concerne à singularidade do gênero estudado, uma elaborada apreensão do que significa trabalhar com uma fonte complexa como a caricatura. De acordo com a autora,
[…] la caricatura es aquí un documento fundamental, cuya lectura y desciframiento permite entender la época en estudio observando las dinámicas de los enfrentamientos facciosos por el usufructo del poder y el papel que desempeñaba la prensa como parte de la estrategia de esas luchas entre grupos rivales; igualmente, es un recurso que permite descubrir la forma en que se generaban determinados imaginarios en torno de ciertas personalidades del momento. Asimismo, desde la sátira y el humor, posibilita el análisis de los discursos oficiales y contestarios y el develamiento de los intríngulis políticos (p. 19).O livro é dividido em sete capítulos, sendo o último reservado às conclusões. No primeiro deles, La caricatura política en la prensa periódica de la Ciudad de México 1876-1888, Gantús insere o leitor nos debates políticos que mobilizaram intelectuais e caricaturistas na luta por um projeto de poder e de país que se utilizaram da imagem para forjar realidades com o fim de produzir e controlar os imaginários coletivos.
Uma questão fundamental discutida pela professora do Instituto de Investigaciones Dr. José María Luis Mora/México é a recepção desse material pela opinião pública mexicana, assunto problemático nos estudos de história da imprensa em virtude da falta de dados que comprovem como os indivíduos liam ou reagiam a determinados textos ou imagens. As caricaturas demandavam, para serem compreendidas, certo conhecimento das personagens envolvidas e ainda de questões relacionadas ao campo político, à cultura e à sociedade em geral.
Partindo dessa premissa, Gantús atribui dois prováveis níveis de leitura da referida iconografia a partir do capital cultural do leitor: o primeiro era composto por pessoas que se fixavam no sentido imediato da imagem, mais simplista; enquanto o segundo, compunha-se daqueles esclarecidos e engajados, que apreendiam as sutilezas e as mensagens implícitas que a imagem trazia a partir de sua visão de mundo.
No segundo capítulo, intitulado Los caricaturistas: trazos que dibujan filias y fobias, a autora discute o papel dos responsáveis pela criação dos desenhos que tinham por objetivo forjar realidades. Os caricaturistas mexicanos do século XIX eram homens de pouco dinheiro, sem reconhecimento social (diferentemente do que ocorria com os outros profissionais que trabalhavam em periódicos) que, compondo um grupo heterogêneo, tinham os traços determinados pelos proprietários dos órgãos aos quais se associavam. A autora elencou os nomes do “seleto grupo de engenhosas armas” (p. 106) e seus respectivos periódicos o que denota a preocupação em traçar um perfil do local de onde publicavam e de seus temas diletos.
Entre os citados, Gantús confere destaque a Daniel Cabrera, responsável pelas maiores críticas a Porfírio Díaz e preso inúmeras vezes, como consequência. Ele assinava suas obras com o pseudônimo Fígaro e, assim como o restante dos caricaturistas que tinham na figura presidencial seu principal tema, dedicou-se a dissecar as relações da cúpula do poder mexicano nesse início da profissionalização da profissão.
A relação entre o poder, os símbolos que o constituem e os governantes foi a temática discorrida no capítulo três, De la proclama tuxtepecana a la idea del ‘hombre necesario’. La construcción de imaginarios a través de la caricatura política. A autora utilizou os conceitos de Maurice Agulhon para demonstrar que diferentemente dos símbolos que conferiam poder e status aos goverantes, “[…] la caricatura se vale de los mismos recursos que avalan al poder pero para enfrentarlo y cuestionarlo”, (p.150).
As análises dos significados conferidos à cadeira presidencial, objeto de desejo, e da espada do general Porfírio Díaz, símbolo polissêmico, constituem o cerne do capítulo no qual Gantús descreve as caricaturas com um rigor metodológico substancial demonstrando como elas serviram aos críticos do governo porfirista. Uma vez na presidência, ao suceder Lerdo de Tejada, Díaz foi mostrado pelos caricaturistas como
[…] una persona de escaso brillo intelectual y un usurpador ambicioso; o lo que es lo mismo como un hombre ignorante, en algunos casos casi se le representaba como un tonto, y un tirano y así se le pintaba de manera franca y explícita (p. 190).A Constituição do México não permitia a reeleição, projeto pelo qual Díaz se batera antes da chegada ao poder. Assim, uma vez concluído seu mandato, o general tratou de afiançar a candidatura de um aliado no intuito de que este último lhe devolvesse a cadeira, no quadriênio posterior. Esse aliado foi Manuel Gonzáles, “su compadre” (p. 195) que deu continuidade às políticas repressoras ao campo jornalístico.
Intitulado Las políticas de Lerdo, Díaz y Gonzalez en torno a la prensa, o quarto capítulo denota o esforço da autora em tecer uma análise comparativa dos governos dos três presidentes mexicanos no que se relaciona às mídias e às práticas repressoras. A partir dessa diretiva, Fausta Gantús conclui que havia uma permanência de disposições contrárias à liberdade de expressão iniciadas com Lerdo de Tejada, que enviou à prisão inúmeros jornalistas, e teve como corolário as sanções aplicadas por Díaz, que em um só dia emitiu ordens para que fossem presos redatores de sete publicações diferentes.
O governo ainda estimulou a criação de outros periódicos que combatessem os da oposição propugnando que a imprensa se combate a partir da própria imprensa, além de impedir que os dissidentes tivessem acesso ao papel, praxe no que se referia às relações entre a mídia impressa e o poder.
As ações governamentais regulatórias são demarcadas no capítulo cinco, Los marcos legal y jurídico para la instrumentación de una política de censura. El triunfo del gobierno sobre la prensa, no qual Gantús delineia que medidas foram implementadas e de onde elas emanaram. O governo mobilizou sua força na Câmara e no Senado para, sob o manto da legalidade, remover os obstáculos que o impedia de obter o comando da (in)formação da população mexicana.
Ambas as casas, pilares do regime democrático, concordaram em modificar um ponto específico do sétimo artigo da Constituição que sustentava a liberdade de expressão. A principal alteração ocorreu nas garantias que os acusados detinham quando sujeitos a um processo: ao invés de haver um foro próprio para os supostos delitos, a emenda de Díaz propunha que eles fossem julgados por tribunais comuns. Ainda no governo de Manuel Gonzáles, o projeto foi aprovado.
Quando Porfírio Díaz retornou ao poder, os mecanismos de censura estavam já instalados e seu papel foi o de impor aos inimigos a força da lei. Vários periódicos deixaram de circular vítimas da “psicologia”, mote das explanações propostas no penúltimo capítulo, ‘La psicología’ o la revancha de la prensa con caricaturas. Entre el recurso legal represivo y la estrategia contestataria, 1885-1888. Nele, há a discussão sobre o destacado papel que os juízes teriam no que se referia à repressão aos crimes de imprensa. De acordo com a autora,
Con base en el análisis de los alegatos legales, podemos definir a la función psicológica como la facultad que dejaba al arbitrio de los jueces la estimación de posibles motivaciones e intenciones que pudieran primar detrás de determinados actos y, en circunstancias particulares, conferirles carácter delictivo (p. 337).
Ao atuar dessa maneira, o juiz seria capaz de ‘captar una realidad más profunda’ (p. 347), uma vez que, ao submeter o periódico, o texto ou a caricatura, que eram, em si, as evidências dos crimes, ele inferiria as intenções dos autores num processo que Gantús compara ao descrito por Carlo Ginzburg quando este autor trata do paradigma indiciário e da busca por sinais, rastros, fios que remeteriam o leitor atento ao detalhe perdido.
Não obstante as tentativas de coerção, Gantús recordou que a caricatura cumpriu seu papel. Por meio dos trabalhos dos artistas do traço, a autora
[…] encontró los espacios para elaborar un discurso de cuestionamiento que hiciera frente a las políticas gubernamentales tendientes a censurar y limitar la libertad de imprenta, cobijadas al amparo de un marco legal y jurídico que permitía la represión sin menoscabar la legitimidad del régimen (p. 383).Nas Reflexiones finales, a autora retoma as premissas essenciais que discutiu ao longo da obra, a saber: a metodologia de trabalho com as fontes iconográficas, a relação conturbada entre a imprensa e o governo mexicano. A despeito das emendas constitucionais e das violências que emanavam do poder Executivo, as críticas se fizeram presentes durante todo o governo de Díaz o que evidencia que as tentativas de instalar um regime que controle totalmente a mídia, apesar de recorrente na América Latina, é natimorta: sempre há resistências.
Este livro, em virtude das brilhantes ilações advindas da interpretação das caricaturas, da rigorosa sistematização das diversificadas fontes apresentadas em tabelas e gráficos e da pertinente bibliografia que serve de esteio às análises, contribui de maneira efetiva para o debate acerca das fontes iconográficas em história dialogando com distintas abordagens que se vinculam, concomitantemente, à História Política e à História Cultural.
Alexandre Andrade da Costa – Doutorando em História – Programa de Pós-Graduação em História – Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita Filho, Faculdade de Ciências e Letras de Assis. Avenida Dom Antônio, 2100 Parque Universitário 19806-900 – Assis, SP – Brasil. E-mail: aachistoria@yahoo.com.br.