ipl-logo

La Revolución: The Mexican Revolution

1022 Words5 Pages

What is a revolution? According to the very first Tegrity session for this course, a revolution is a violent movement led by one or more leaders with a program or vision in mind that would ensure a fundamental social or political change with a large number of participants (Tegrity Session 1). Throughout world history, there have been a rather staggering amount of revolutions that have taken place. The most influential event to rock Mexican history to its core in the twentieth-century was La Revolución, The Mexican Revolution.
As a lay individual, my knowledge of the Mexican Revolution was very limited, seeing as it was not a topic primarily hit on during my high school education. Being a required reading, I was not expecting this to be an …show more content…

The introduction serves as a very good source of information to help explain the Mexican Revolution to individuals such as myself, with little knowledge about such an event. To make things even better in terms of providing accurate information, the author of the novel, Mariano Azuela, knew exactly about what he was writing about, seeing as he was actually involved with the revolution himself. Azuela was a doctor in Pancho Villa’s army and participated in multiple key events within the conflict itself. The novel itself doesn’t attempt to cover the entire revolution, but only focus on a handful of incredibly meaningful happenstances, both within the battle itself and within the conversations between the various characters in the …show more content…

When the revolution is led by those with a lack of moral leadership and a fondness of betrayal, there is no other outcome but for it to fail. Even after the rebels had won a small victory, they really weren’t that much better than the people they were fighting against. That goes for all revolutions, not just the Mexican Revolution. When reading about one war, the details within the battle go onto explain a fairly good portion of what every other battle fought has been like. Without mentioning other battles, one can take away that the rape, the burning of people’s homes, tortures, and massacres of innocent people was widespread across all battles just from being informed through this

More about La Revolución: The Mexican Revolution

Open Document