"This volume treats the reader to Carlos Pereda’s philosophical virtuosity. With this flawless translation, Noell Birondo introduces an English-speaking audience to Pereda’s masterful reflections on 'nomadic reason,' modern notions of identity, and the persistence of 'colonial vices' in contemporary Mexican philosophy. This is an essential text for anyone interested in these topics and in contemporary Latin American philosophy more generally."
—Carlos Alberto Sánchez, author of Blooming in the Ruins: How Mexican Philosophy Can Guide You Toward the Good Life
"Mexico Unveiled is a both a critical survey and a powerful intervention into the philosophical currents of the twentith century in Mexico. Carlos Pereda—one of Latin America’s most influential and admired philosophers—masterfully tackles the legacy of key Mexican thinkers, from José Vasconcelos to Luis Villoro, by examining crucial questions of coloniality, nationalism, exile, identity politics, and exclusion. Against the toxicity of what he diagnoses as 'arrogant reason,' Pereda’s intellectual project engages in 'nomadic thinking,' that is, a philosophical inquiry in constant movement. This book unseats sedimented structures, disrupts pernicious ideological stances, and ultimately invites the reader to explore Mexico’s rich philosophical debates that extend far beyond national and epistemic borders."
—Oswaldo Zavala, author of Drug Cartels Do Not Exist: Narcotrafficking in US and Mexican Culture
Praise for the original Spanish edition:
“In a world with a lot of violence and great injustices, Mexico Unveiled offers a breath of fresh air: the deontological perspective is not abandoned; on the contrary, it is used to argue claims and denounce relations of domination. Not only does it teach us to go beyond the obvious, but also to ask ourselves why the consolidation of the obvious.”
—Arturo Santillana Andraca, Ánfora