More Shopping OptionsOn November 17, 1901, Mexico City police raided a private party and arrested 41 men, half of whom were dressed as women. Clandestine transvestite balls were not unheard of at this time, and a raid would not normally gain national attention. However, Mexican cultural trends in literature, art, the sciences, and in journalism were inciting an atmosphere of sexual curiosity that was in search of the right turn of events to ignite a discursive explosion and focus interest on what was not a new phenomenon, but what was about to become a new concept: homosexuality. The editors treat the “nefarious” ball as a cultural event in itself and have assembled pictures, including the famous engravings by Posada, and have translated part of an historical novel about the event. At the same time, they uncover the underworld in Mexico City with essays on prison conditions, criminology, mental health discourse, and working class masculinities to create a rare and comprehensive slice of Mexican history at the turn of the century.
Robert McKee Irwin is Assistant Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Tulane University. Edward J. McCaughan is Associate Professor of Sociology and co-chair of Latin American Studies at Loyola University of New Orleans. Michelle Rocío Nasser was co-organizer of the Centenary of the Famous 41 symposium and curated the accompanying exhibition of José Guadalup Posada broadsides and newspaper stories on “the Famous 41.’
"The Famous 41 is a rich contribution to the growing bibliography on the relationship between the state and sexuality. Taking an important case from 1901 in which police interrupted a clandestine party of drag queens in Mexico City, the editors first supply significant archival documentation taken from newspapers, graphic art, and lost fiction of the time and then assemble an impressive collection of scholarly essays to address affirmations of sexual difference and homophobic response in early twentieth century Mexico. Focusing on the politics of visibility and the power of normative law, on the culture of the closet and battles to regulate otherness, the authors offer original and illuminating insights that considerably expand the range of reflection belonging to Latin American cultural studies." -- Francine Masiello, UC Berkeley, author of The Art of Transition
Contents * Introduction – Robert McKee Irwin, Ed McCaughan and Michelle Nasser * Part I: The Famous 41 * The 41 and the Great Raid by Carlos Monsiváis - Translated by Aaron Walker * The Centenary of the Famous 41 - Robert McKee Irwin * The Scandal of the 41: Mexican Newspaper Coverage, November, 1901 Spanish Version; English Version - Translated by Robert McKee Irwin, Michelle Nasser * The 41: A Socio-Critical Novel (1906): Eduardo Castrejón’s Lost Novel, Excerpts , Spanish Version; English Version - Translated by Robert McKee Irwin, Michelle Nasser * Part II: Sexuality and Social Control in Mexico, 1901 * Homophobia and the Construction of Working-Class Masculinities: Mexico City, 1890-1910 - Robert Buffington * The Lagartijo at The High Life: Notes on Masculine Consumption, Race, Nation and Homosexuality in Porfirian Mexico - Víctor Macías González * Interpretations of Sexuality in Mexico City Prisons: A Critical Version of Roumagnac - Pablo Piccato * Beyond Medicalization: Asylum Doctors and Inmates Produce Sexual Knowledge at the General Insane Asylum La Castañeda in Late Porfirian Mexico - Cristina Rivera Garza * Sentimental Excess and Gender Disruption: The Case of Amado Nervo - Sylvia Molloy