Thursday, May 19, 2022
SCIENMAG: Latest Science and Health News
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • HOME PAGE
  • BIOLOGY
  • CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
  • MEDICINE
    • Cancer
    • Infectious Emerging Diseases
  • SPACE
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • CONTACT US
  • HOME PAGE
  • BIOLOGY
  • CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
  • MEDICINE
    • Cancer
    • Infectious Emerging Diseases
  • SPACE
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
Scienmag - Latest science news from science magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home SCIENCE NEWS Social & Behavioral Science

Book examines history of Mexico City’s public square, evolution of Mexican spatial identities

March 9, 2022
in Social & Behavioral Science
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — For 700 years, Mexico City’s public square, known as the Zócalo, has been the place where many of the nation’s most significant events unfolded.

Benjamin Bross, architecture professor and urban historian at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Credit: Photo by L. Brian Stauffer

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — For 700 years, Mexico City’s public square, known as the Zócalo, has been the place where many of the nation’s most significant events unfolded.

Benjamin Bross, an architecture professor and urban historian at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, wrote an urbanism-based cultural history of the Zócalo, using the public square and historic events that took place there to explain the emergence and evolution of Mexican identities over time. His recently published book, “Mexico City’s Zócalo: A History of a Constructed Spatial Identity,” explores  how spaces embody sociocultural identity and how identity is shaped by those spaces.

“Our attachment to spaces produces a sense of place. In many ways, we generate a sense of who we are by the places we live and how we experience them. I believe that environments shape, to some degree, the way we view the world,” Bross said.

The Zócalo is a public space that all Mexicans can share, and the plaza and its activities are products of social, cultural, economic and political values found across the different components of Mexican society – the state, the powerful and elite, the working class and the marginalized, Bross said.

“In a nation as regionally diverse as Mexico, with hundreds of ethnicities, cultures and living languages and dialects, few things or places are perceived as common to all Mexicans as the shared embrace of the Zócalo as the country’s symbolic heart,” he wrote.

Throughout Mexico’s history, its various national identities have played out there, starting with the migration of the Mexica (Aztecs) to the Valley of Mexico. Surrounded by other Indigenous groups who had arrived earlier, the Mexica claimed an unoccupied island in the middle of a lake, where they built their capital, Tenochtitlan. The city’s Sacred Precinct contained palaces, temples and other ceremonial buildings, with a marketplace next to it – the first incarnation of what would become the Zócalo.

After the Spanish conquest of the region, the invaders demolished the Sacred Precinct and built their new capital in the same place, using stone from Mexica structures to construct churches, palaces and administrative buildings for Spaniards, Bross said. Initially named Plaza Mayor by the Spanish, the space was renamed Plaza de la Constitución in honor of Spain’s 1812 Constitution of Cadiz, which remains the public square’s formal name.

In 1624, citizens rioted after the Spanish viceroy initiated severe political and market reforms that included the arrest and expulsion of Mexico’s archbishop. Bross said the event changed the nature of the space from a passive marketplace to a contested political space.

The Zócalo was the backdrop to a major moment in Mexico’s independence from Spain, as well. Mexican Independence Gen. Augustín de Iturbide marched into the plaza in 1821 with the Army of the Three Guarantees behind him, “reaffirming the plaza’s central role as a major civic space,” Bross said. “He rode into the plaza to show that Mexicans were in control now. An agreement with the Spanish crown for independence had already been signed. This was really all about staging and imagery.”

Events at the Zócalo also have changed the way Mexicans think about their national identity. For example, Bross said, photographs of civilian casualties from the 1913 coup during the Mexican Revolution, known as Tragic Ten Days, galvanized the country’s citizens and unleashed the bloodiest part of the conflict.

“This is the heart of the nation, and here are these young people, not just loyal soldiers to a democratically elected government who have been felled in defense of a democratically elected president, but also innocent bystanders who happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time. It was a wake-up call,” Bross said.

The same was true of a brutal putdown of student protests preceding the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. The protests started in the Zócalo and ended days later in a nearby neighborhood, Tlatelolco, where the government violently dispersed the protestors, leading to the deaths of hundreds of students.

“It made a lot of Mexicans realize that the state wasn’t a democratic one.  It began a true pushback against the single party rule since the 1920s,” Bross said.

At the same time, the Zócalo maintained its symbolic importance by being the location of the start of the 1968 Olympic marathon event. It was “a clear indication of how the Mexican games’ organizers felt the crowning moment of the Olympics should be in the Zócalo,” he said.

Another major transformation occurred in 1997, when the city established a policy enabling the plaza as a place of peaceful protest.

“That’s a very big moment. It’s a hallmark of a truly democratic society to have places where people can protest without fear of state repression,” Bross said.

“With each transformation, its spatial identity has been enriched,” he said of the Zócalo. “Spaces matter. They inform and shape our attitudes and relations in the public realm, and therefore to each other as we form community.”

 

Editor’s note: To contact Benjamin Bross, email [email protected]



Tags: bookcitysEvolutionexaminesHistoryidentitiesMexicanMexicoPublicspatialsquare
Share26Tweet17Share5ShareSendShare
  • Gladstone scientists Tongcui Ma, Irene Chen, and Rahul Suryawanshi.

    “Natural immunity” from omicron is weak and limited, study finds

    68 shares
    Share 27 Tweet 17
  • Researchers discover genetic cause of megaesophagus in dogs

    1022 shares
    Share 409 Tweet 256
  • Scripps Research awarded $67 million by NIH to lead new Pandemic Preparedness Center

    66 shares
    Share 26 Tweet 17
  • Do early therapies help very young children with or at high likelihood for autism?

    66 shares
    Share 26 Tweet 17
  • Ecological functions of streams and rivers severely affected globally

    71 shares
    Share 28 Tweet 18
  • Null results research now published by major behavioral medicine journal

    310 shares
    Share 124 Tweet 78
ADVERTISEMENT

About us

We bring you the latest science news from best research centers and universities around the world. Check our website.

Latest NEWS

Understanding how sunscreens damage coral

SUTD develops design-based activity to enhance students’ understanding in electrochemistry

New Curtin research resurrects ‘lost’ coral species

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 187 other subscribers

© 2022 Scienmag- Science Magazine: Latest Science News.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME PAGE
  • BIOLOGY
  • CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
  • MEDICINE
    • Cancer
    • Infectious Emerging Diseases
  • SPACE
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • CONTACT US

© 2022 Scienmag- Science Magazine: Latest Science News.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Posting....