Globalizing Violence: The Mexican Revolution and the First World War

Q4 Arts and Humanities
Stefan Rinke, Karina Kriegesmann
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Abstract

Without doubt, since its very beginning, the 20th century has been a century of violence. Latin America, too, partook in that experience. This can be illustrated clearly by paying attention to the Mexican Revolution. The protracted civil war in which the various factions fought during many years demanded even more victims per capita than the First World War in all the belligerent European countries. In fact, the Mexican case emphasized that there was no possibility to keep out of the global spiral of violence that during the war years reached a hitherto unknown dimension and went beyond war-torn Europe or single nation states. In order to obtain a more detailed understanding of the interpretive models of the World War developed in Latin America and especially in Mexico, a consideration of the circumstances of cruelty in the subcontinent in the early decade of 1910 appears to be important. This does not mean to establish a causal connection between the developments in Mexico and the World War. However, an analysis of the viewpoint of numerous contemporaries reveals that both events were linked to a world in crisis. From the contemporaries’ perspective, a wave of violence had caught the whole globe and underpinned the end of its self-certainty. This article aims to depict the Mexican perceptions and connotations of the First World War while considering the specific regional circumstances and the interactions between global transformations and local experiences. For Mexico, in particular, the war appeared to be inserted in a period of social revolutionary turmoil and political disturbance, which reached its peak between 1917 and 1919. This process opened up new spaces for understanding the role of the nation as well as for its position in a world which was profoundly changing.
暴力全球化:墨西哥革命与第一次世界大战
毫无疑问,从一开始,20世纪就是一个暴力的世纪。拉丁美洲也有过这样的经历。关注墨西哥革命就能清楚地说明这一点。各派在这场旷日持久的内战中进行了多年的战斗,在所有交战国的欧洲国家中,人均伤亡人数甚至比第一次世界大战还要多。事实上,墨西哥的情况强调,不可能置身于全球暴力螺旋之外,这种暴力在战争年代达到了迄今未知的程度,超出了饱受战争蹂躏的欧洲或单一民族国家。为了更详细地了解在拉丁美洲,特别是在墨西哥发展起来的世界大战的解释模式,考虑1910年早期十年次大陆的残酷情况似乎很重要。这并不意味着在墨西哥的事态发展和第二次世界大战之间建立因果关系。然而,对许多同时代人观点的分析表明,这两件事都与危机中的世界有关。从同时代人的角度来看,一场暴力浪潮席卷了整个世界,终结了世界的自我确定性。本文旨在描述墨西哥对第一次世界大战的看法和内涵,同时考虑到具体的地区环境以及全球变革与当地经验之间的相互作用。特别是对墨西哥来说,战争似乎是在社会革命动荡和政治动荡的时期插入的,这在1917年至1919年期间达到了顶峰。这一进程为理解国家的作用及其在深刻变化的世界中的地位开辟了新的空间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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