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1-37 of 37
- This program deals with the bloodiest period of the Revolution: the civil war among the winners. At the beginning, the coalition between the followers of Villa and Zapata seemed to overcome, but forces led by Carranza, under the military command of the brilliant general Álvaro Obregón won the fight.
- What portion of history prevails in the memory of one of the northern Chihuahua's counties where the first social revolution of the modern era began? The Mexican Revolution. People from Namiquipa reveal their spoken local history 100 years after that conflict while they are living into a new uncertainty social environment derived from a war between the federal government and the Mexican Mafias.
- A brief portrait of the Porfiriato (the years of the Porfirio Díaz regime), the history of the uprising led by Francisco I. Madero who achieved a victory that was too rapid, too easy and the incipient conflict between the revolution of "those from above" (represented, by Madero, the hacienda owners, among others) and the revolution of "those from below", led by men like Zapata.
- Neither the Bourbon Reforms during colonial times nor the nation's declaration of independence in 1821 made Sonorans feel as if they were Mexican. The state was drawn into the rest of the nation by the railroad and growing demographic shifts during the years of Porfirio Díaz's reign, but the Revolution of 1910 would ultimately be the event that definitively integrated Sonora and its inhabitants into the Mexican nation. Sonora would provide the country with political and military leadership, headed by leaders such as Álvaro Obregón and Plutarco Elías Calles. They would lead Mexicans from devastation to armed struggle, as well as through the nation's first years of economic, moral and political reconstruction.
- The labor exerted by intellectuals and artists in the midst of the nightmare of death and destruction experienced by Mexicans from 1910 to 1920 left its imprint on Mexican culture.
- This program tells of the problems of Madero's government and the attacks made by the press and by politicians who were against him. The Tragic Tenth, the triumphant military coup d' etat led by Victoriano Huerta, who assassinated President Madero and Vice-president Pino Suárez and installed a brutal military regime. The program details the uprisings against Huerta, who got together under the control of the governor of Coahuila, Venustiano Carranza, and the military actions of Pascual Orozco and Pancho Villa. The episode ends with the victory of the Constitutionalist Army.
- The story of the Constitution and the Carranza years, with their great difficulties (hunger, butchery and a large part of the country in war), until the last successful uprising of Mexican history: the victory of the men of Sonora led by Álvaro Obregón. A final section evaluates some of the Revolutions results and effects and the destinies of its principal leaders.
- The revolution in Mexico marked a profound change in the life of a society that sought and needed a transformation in all its structures. Muralism became the most important artistic phenomenon of twentieth-century Mexican art, and it is the one that finally projected it to the rest of the world, definitively making it independent of European aesthetics.
- Episode: (2023)2017–Podcast Episode
- Episode: (2023)2020–Podcast Episode
- 2015–Podcast Episode
- 2015–Podcast Episode
- 2020–Podcast Episode
- 2020–Podcast Episode
- 2021– 13mPodcast Episode
- 2020– 34mPodcast Episode
- 2010–TV Episode
- Episode: (2016)1998– 45mTV EpisodeThe members of the Generation of 29 and of the Half Century Generation were tired of the extreme patriotism within the Mexican Revolution literature, so they left behind they rifles and 'Adelitas' in order to make way to an everyday literature where humor combines with colloquial language, rural and urban scenarios coexist and fantasy has a dialogue with psychology. Works like "El laberinto de la soledad" (The Labyrinth of Solitude) by Octavio Paz, "Pedro Páramo" by Juan Rulfo and "La region más transparente" (Where the Air is Clear) by Carlos Fuentes reflected about social inequality as it was the legacy of the post-revolutionary regime, and on the meantime they aspire to the cosmopolitanism promised by the Mexican Miracle. These two projects defined the new national identity.
- At the beginning of the second decade of the 20th century, something unprecedented happened in Mexico: the intellectual class fought against democracy. Through a corrosive and freedom murderous press, poets and writers opposed the courageous and idealistic project of Francisco I. Madero. This opposition had fatal consequences for the incipient Mexican democracy. After the murder of Madero, the Revolution bloodied the country and expelled poets and intellectuals and those who decided not to escape, were condemned to live in solitude the hardships of war, but even in those long years of confusion, Mexican writers managed to create memorable works.
- Episode: (2018)1998–TV EpisodeIn the early 1920s, at the end of the armed phase of the Mexican Revolution, led to a gradual and complex process of government institutions construction, which were given the task of reinventing the Mexican cultural identity. At the time, the nationalist ideology was based on the image of the mestizo as the new Mexican who emerged of the Revolution; however, the studies in social psychology and the open criticism to nationalism generated contrary ideas to that way of thinking.
- Episode:(2010)
La Revolución, promesa y sufrimiento. Forjando la Suave Patria, la cultura en la Revolución Mexicana
1998– 45mTV EpisodeThe labor exerted by intellectuals and artists in the midst of the nightmare of death and destruction experienced by Mexicans from 1910 to 1920 left its imprint on Mexican culture. - Neither the Bourbon Reforms during colonial times nor the nation's declaration of independence in 1821 made Sonorans feel as if they were Mexican. The state was drawn into the rest of the nation by the railroad and growing demographic shifts during the years of Porfirio Díaz's reign, but the Revolution of 1910 would ultimately be the event that definitively integrated Sonora and its inhabitants into the Mexican nation. Sonora would provide the country with political and military leadership, headed by leaders such as Álvaro Obregón and Plutarco Elías Calles. They would lead Mexicans from devastation to armed struggle, as well as through the nation's first years of economic, moral and political reconstruction.
- A brief portrait of the Porfiriato (the years of the Porfirio Díaz regime), the history of the uprising led by Francisco I. Madero who achieved a victory that was too rapid, too easy and the incipient conflict between the revolution of "those from above" (represented, by Madero, the hacienda owners, among others) and the revolution of "those from below", led by men like Zapata.
- The problems of Madero's government and the attacks made by the press and by politicians who were against him. The Tragic Tenth, the triumphant military coup d' etat led by Victoriano Huerta, who assassinated President Madero and Vice-president Pino Suárez and installed a brutal military regime. The program details the uprisings against Huerta, who got together under the control of the governor of Coahuila, Venustiano Carranza, and the military actions of Pascual Orozco and Pancho Villa. The episode ends with the victory of the Constitutionalist Army.
- This program deals with the bloodiest period of the Revolution: the civil war among the winners. At the beginning, the coalition between the followers of Villa and Zapata seemed to overcome, but forces led by Carranza, under the military command of the brilliant general Álvaro Obregón won the fight.
- This program tells the story of the Constitution and the Carranza years, with their great difficulties (hunger, butchery and a large part of the country in war), until the last successful uprising of Mexican history: the victory of the men of Sonora led by Álvaro Obregón. A final section evaluates some of the Revolutions results and effects and the destinies of its principal leaders.