Peter F. Guardino
Author of The Dead March: A History of the Mexican-American War
About the Author
Peter Guardino is Provost's Professor of History at Indiana University. His work focuses on social movements, nationalism, and popular political culture in modern Mexico.
Works by Peter F. Guardino
Tagged
Common Knowledge
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Reviews
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Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Members
- 116
- Popularity
- #169,721
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 11
- Languages
- 1
I honestly couldn't recall anything about the Mexican-American War when I started this book. That's relevant because I went into reading this without any preconceptions or half remembered high school history lessons.
Guardino does an excellent job of not just reporting the battles and other events that normally make up history books but covers the roles of patriotism and the perception of its lack in Mexico (which wasn't true; Mexicans were just as invested in Mexico as a distinct nation with its own culture, heritage, people, and ideas of how to govern and be governed), the role poverty and economics of both countries especially in regards to military service, the role of racist and anti-Catholic ideology/beliefs, and the nature of regular army versus volunteer army units in both countries.
This is not a history that buys into the idea that USA is the best and that is why they won. "Winning" a war is more than fighting battles and in the end both sides lose because of the loss of life. Both sides committed atrocities but many of the American volunteer units were the most egregious perpetrators. These are not parts of history that get covered in a high school history class.
Guardino does an excellent job of covering social aspects of the war and the war itself while maintaining a nearly unbiased approach. He doesn't glorify the winners and doesn't excoriate the losers. In war, everyone loses.… (more)