"Reading Monstrous Politics is like riding on a microbus: it will transport you across this city's unmappable routes, make unexpected turns and fascinating connections, to finally get you at your destination. Gerlofs's political history of Mexico City is a masterful lens to understand the permanency and ephemerality of urban revolutions."
—Julie-Anne Boudreau, author of Global Urban Politics: Informalization of the State— Julie-Anne Boudreau, author of Global Urban Politics: Informalization of the State
"It is hard to imagine a better map of Mexico City's neverending urban revolutions than Monstrous Politics. And it is equally as hard to imagine a better guide to the treacherous currents and marshy backwaters of these revolutions than Ben Gerlofs. This is the book for anyone who wants to know what urban revolutions are, how they unfold, and why they matter—or, for that matter, just want to find their way across Mexico City's endlessly fascinating political landscape."
—Don Mitchell, author of Mean Streets: Homelessness, Public Space, and the Limits of Capital— Don Mitchell, author of Mean Streets: Homelessness, Public Space, and the Limits of Capital
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"In this incisively dialectical analysis of Mexico City's historical and contemporary urban revolutions, Ben Gerlofs illuminates the spatial transformations, political strategies, structures of feeling, sociopolitical crises, and forms of everyday insurgency that underpin struggles for the right to the city."
—Neil Brenner, author of New Urban Spaces: Urban Theory and the Scale Question— Neil Brenner, author of New Urban Spaces: Urban Theory and the Scale Question
"Ben Gerlofs reminds us, with enviable erudition and deep theoretical insight, that Mexico City was and continues to be the staging ground upon which revolutionary sentiments both explode and implode. Embracing a longue durée that starts with the 1910 Revolution and lands in the struggle over urban political reform in Mexico City nearly a century later, this book unpacks the complex ways that national politics still write themselves on the capital city and vice versa, even when such seemingly pedestrian issues as mobility infrastructure are at stake. In the era of AMLO, whose personal trajectory embodies so many of these threads and contradictions, one could not ask for a more timely or important argument."
—Diane E. Davis, author of Urban Leviathan: Mexico City in the Twentieth Century— Diane E. Davis, author of Urban Leviathan: Mexico City in the Twentieth Century
"Reading Monstrous Politics is like riding on a microbus: it will transport you across this city's unmappable routes, make unexpected turns and fascinating connections, to finally get you at your destination. Gerlofs's political history of Mexico City is a masterful lens to understand the permanency and ephemerality of urban revolutions."
—Julie-Anne Boudreau, author of Global Urban Politics: Informalization of the State— Julie-Anne Boudreau, author of Global Urban Politics: Informalization of the State
"It is hard to imagine a better map of Mexico City's neverending urban revolutions than Monstrous Politics. And it is equally as hard to imagine a better guide to the treacherous currents and marshy backwaters of these revolutions than Ben Gerlofs. This is the book for anyone who wants to know what urban revolutions are, how they unfold, and why they matter—or, for that matter, just want to find their way across Mexico City's endlessly fascinating political landscape."
—Don Mitchell, author of Mean Streets: Homelessness, Public Space, and the Limits of Capital— Don Mitchell, author of Mean Streets: Homelessness, Public Space, and the Limits of Capital
— -
"In this incisively dialectical analysis of Mexico City's historical and contemporary urban revolutions, Ben Gerlofs illuminates the spatial transformations, political strategies, structures of feeling, sociopolitical crises, and forms of everyday insurgency that underpin struggles for the right to the city."
—Neil Brenner, author of New Urban Spaces: Urban Theory and the Scale Question— Neil Brenner, author of New Urban Spaces: Urban Theory and the Scale Question
"Ben Gerlofs reminds us, with enviable erudition and deep theoretical insight, that Mexico City was and continues to be the staging ground upon which revolutionary sentiments both explode and implode. Embracing a longue durée that starts with the 1910 Revolution and lands in the struggle over urban political reform in Mexico City nearly a century later, this book unpacks the complex ways that national politics still write themselves on the capital city and vice versa, even when such seemingly pedestrian issues as mobility infrastructure are at stake. In the era of AMLO, whose personal trajectory embodies so many of these threads and contradictions, one could not ask for a more timely or important argument."
—Diane E. Davis, author of Urban Leviathan: Mexico City in the Twentieth Century— Diane E. Davis, author of Urban Leviathan: Mexico City in the Twentieth Century