cover of episode British Cultural Commentators on Revolutionary Mexico

British Cultural Commentators on Revolutionary Mexico

2016/11/29
logo of podcast Sydney Ideas

Sydney Ideas

Frequently requested episodes will be transcribed first

Shownotes Transcript

The Mexican Revolution (1910–20) gave birth to a radical regime which, during the 1920s and 1930s, innovated in terms of state-building, social reform, and cultural policy, thus becoming a magnet for foreign journalists and intellectual tourists.

But while American cultural commentators (John Reed, Frank Tannenbaum, Carleton Beals and others) were often sympathetic, the British – D H Lawrence, Graham Greene, Aldous Huxley, Evelyn Waugh, and Malcolm Lowry – were highly critical.

This talk by Professor Emeritus Alan Knight (University of Oxford) focuses on the British, asking why they were so negative, what they objected to, and what they tell us about the Mexican revolutionary project – or about themselves, and the interwar British society to which they belonged.

More info: http://sydney.edu.au/sydney_ideas/lectures/2016/professor_alan_knight.shtml