The Integrated State: Architecture, Planning, and Politics in Mexico, 1938-1958

This dissertation focuses on the intersections of the professionalization of architecture, regional and national infrastructure planning, and Mexican politics during the first three decades following the Mexican Revolution. I especially aim to shed light on the political and managerial role of archi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: López, Albert José-Antonio
Other Authors: Dutta, Arindam
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139869
_version_ 1811080390529515520
author López, Albert José-Antonio
author2 Dutta, Arindam
author_facet Dutta, Arindam
López, Albert José-Antonio
author_sort López, Albert José-Antonio
collection MIT
description This dissertation focuses on the intersections of the professionalization of architecture, regional and national infrastructure planning, and Mexican politics during the first three decades following the Mexican Revolution. I especially aim to shed light on the political and managerial role of architects during a crucial period of pseudo state-corporatism, dominant party political "institutionalization," and ideologically fraught nationalist socio-economic development occurring between the late 1930s to mid1950s. I argue that architects became central figures in mid-century Mexican political society and the state's planning bureaucracy as Mexico's mode of governmentality shifted from an ideologically flexible post-conflict reconstructionist model to various modalities of governance ranging from socialist and nationalist interpretations of pseudo state-corporatism, increasing executive branch empowerment with varied levels of presidentialism, and eventually the embrace of a developmentalist, technocratic and bureaucratic authoritarianism. An important faction of Mexican Architects argued their indispensability to political society and appealed to popular support via print journalism, but also public speeches, and use of other mass forms of media, in a broad and long-term collective mobility project. The key claim of this faction – and in particular the small handful of its most capable and already politically connected leaders – was that the architectural profession possessed not only artistic and creative defining qualities, but also technical and managerial capabilities that could serve the very particular constructive needs of post-revolutionary nation-state construction and socio-economic development. They additionally sought to differentiate their training, especially in regards to their expertise on urbanism, town and regional planning, and graphic projection in general so as to distinguish themselves from other technical professions, such as engineering, as they competed for primacy in the growing bureaucracies that held jurisdiction over the infrastructural organization of the national territory. However, some of the deepest inroads by architects into Mexican political society were made by those who proved to be equally capable in using the written and spoken word so as to characterize themselves as public intellectuals, visionaries, and moral reformers. These were powerful figures in the construction of a modern public and political consciousness at a time when Mexico was undergoing internal crisis and transformation due to outcries against corruption, uncertain developmentalist success, changing political dispensations, and the framing of new legitimizing, regenerative, and nationalist modernizing programs.
first_indexed 2024-09-23T11:30:53Z
format Thesis
id mit-1721.1/139869
institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology
last_indexed 2024-09-23T11:30:53Z
publishDate 2022
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
record_format dspace
spelling mit-1721.1/1398692022-02-08T03:42:26Z The Integrated State: Architecture, Planning, and Politics in Mexico, 1938-1958 López, Albert José-Antonio Dutta, Arindam Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Architecture This dissertation focuses on the intersections of the professionalization of architecture, regional and national infrastructure planning, and Mexican politics during the first three decades following the Mexican Revolution. I especially aim to shed light on the political and managerial role of architects during a crucial period of pseudo state-corporatism, dominant party political "institutionalization," and ideologically fraught nationalist socio-economic development occurring between the late 1930s to mid1950s. I argue that architects became central figures in mid-century Mexican political society and the state's planning bureaucracy as Mexico's mode of governmentality shifted from an ideologically flexible post-conflict reconstructionist model to various modalities of governance ranging from socialist and nationalist interpretations of pseudo state-corporatism, increasing executive branch empowerment with varied levels of presidentialism, and eventually the embrace of a developmentalist, technocratic and bureaucratic authoritarianism. An important faction of Mexican Architects argued their indispensability to political society and appealed to popular support via print journalism, but also public speeches, and use of other mass forms of media, in a broad and long-term collective mobility project. The key claim of this faction – and in particular the small handful of its most capable and already politically connected leaders – was that the architectural profession possessed not only artistic and creative defining qualities, but also technical and managerial capabilities that could serve the very particular constructive needs of post-revolutionary nation-state construction and socio-economic development. They additionally sought to differentiate their training, especially in regards to their expertise on urbanism, town and regional planning, and graphic projection in general so as to distinguish themselves from other technical professions, such as engineering, as they competed for primacy in the growing bureaucracies that held jurisdiction over the infrastructural organization of the national territory. However, some of the deepest inroads by architects into Mexican political society were made by those who proved to be equally capable in using the written and spoken word so as to characterize themselves as public intellectuals, visionaries, and moral reformers. These were powerful figures in the construction of a modern public and political consciousness at a time when Mexico was undergoing internal crisis and transformation due to outcries against corruption, uncertain developmentalist success, changing political dispensations, and the framing of new legitimizing, regenerative, and nationalist modernizing programs. Ph.D. 2022-02-07T15:09:39Z 2022-02-07T15:09:39Z 2021-09 2021-12-02T17:23:03.688Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139869 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright MIT http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle López, Albert José-Antonio
The Integrated State: Architecture, Planning, and Politics in Mexico, 1938-1958
title The Integrated State: Architecture, Planning, and Politics in Mexico, 1938-1958
title_full The Integrated State: Architecture, Planning, and Politics in Mexico, 1938-1958
title_fullStr The Integrated State: Architecture, Planning, and Politics in Mexico, 1938-1958
title_full_unstemmed The Integrated State: Architecture, Planning, and Politics in Mexico, 1938-1958
title_short The Integrated State: Architecture, Planning, and Politics in Mexico, 1938-1958
title_sort integrated state architecture planning and politics in mexico 1938 1958
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139869
work_keys_str_mv AT lopezalbertjoseantonio theintegratedstatearchitectureplanningandpoliticsinmexico19381958
AT lopezalbertjoseantonio integratedstatearchitectureplanningandpoliticsinmexico19381958