Mexican History: Different Views of Revolutionary Nationalism
Mexican Constitution of 1917, Article 27, pp. 122-125
Marion Letcher: American, British, and Mexican Investment in Mexico, 1911, pp. 144-145
The United States Mexican Commission, The Bucareli Agreements, 1923, pp. 148-151
Rosalie Evans, Letters from Mexico, pp. 129-132
Charles F. Simon, Testimony in Support of his Claim, pp. 141-144
Many historians argue that Mexican nationalism was a product of the Mexican Revolution. Prior to the Mexican Revolution, the inhabitants of that country did not see that they shared a common sense of purpose, a common culture, or even a common history. The revolution changed all that. One of the most important bases of the new Mexican nationalism was a suspicion of foreigners. Considering some of the above documents, answer the following questions in a thoughtful essay on ?Revolutionary Nationalism?: What was Mexican Revolutionary Nationalism and when and why did it arise? Which document or documents produced during the revolution enshrined it? What were the ramifications of this new nationalism for foreign interests, and how did Americans manage the more radical elements of it?
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