Description
Mexico City is a place of superlatives. The oldest city in the Americas, it is now the worlds largest urban area. Formerly the center of the Aztec and Spanish empires, this vast modern metropolis is home to over fifteen million people, mirroring Mexicos mixed cultural identity. Rapid growth and industrial expansion have created dramatic environmental problems, turning Mexico City into what has been called the first post-apocalypse city. Polluted and congested, it is slowly sinking into the lake on which the Spanish founded their symbol of conquest. Nick Caistor explores this city of extremes, revealing its turbulent past and chaotic present through its urban landscape. Looking at Aztec ruins, baroque monuments and modernistic complexes, he traces the history of a volatile and vibrant city, where conquest, revolution and natural disaster have left their marks. The city of artists, writers and revolutionaries: Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, Octavio Paz and Carlos Fuentes, Zapata, Villa and Trotsky The city of indigenous Mexico: the living legacy of the Aztecs Tenochtitlan; museums, festivals and markets; modern indigenous culture The city of modernity: skyscrapers, highways and flyovers; the stock exchange and industrial sprawl; where the Third World meets the First.
Author: Nick Caistor
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Interlink Books
Published: 01/01/2000
Series: Cities of the Imagination
Pages: 256
Weight: 0.62lbs
Size: 8.01h x 5.26w x 0.71d
ISBN: 9781566563499
Language: English
This title is only available via back order





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