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The Laboratory of the Revolution

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Laboratory of the Revolution is the first-ever professional study of Tomás Garrido Canabal, revolutionary strongman of Tabasco state between 1922 and 1935. He dreamed of turning Tabasco—an isolate...
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  • 09 October 2025
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Laboratory of the Revolution is the first-ever professional study of Tomás Garrido Canabal, revolutionary strongman of Tabasco state between 1922 and 1935. He dreamed of turning Tabasco—an isolated backwater and the quintessential “banana republic”—into a beacon of progress. Garrido’s recipe for that progress consisted of ridding the state of religion, prohibiting alcohol and other vices, championing science, and boosting agriculture and ranching. He only fell from power when a shoot-out in Tabasco furnished the pretext for subordinating the state to President Lázaro Cárdenas’s centrally governed political machine, the forerunner of Mexico’s long-lived one-party system.
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Price: $127.00
Pages: 324
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Critical Latin America
Publication Date: 09 October 2025
ISBN: 9789004737150
Format: Hardcover
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Carlos Martínez Assad is Professor Emeritus of the Universidad Autónoma Nacional de México. In addition to his classic El laboratorio de la Revolución: El Tabasco garridista, he has published extensively on matters of regional and national history. A recognized authority on the Mexican Revolution as well as Mexico’s extensive Lebanese community, he has garnered many awards in his career, including a John Simon Guggrenheim grant and the Universidad Nacional’s award for the promotion of research.
Terry Rugeley, now retired as Professor of Mexican and Latin American History, is founder and CEO of Fountain Pen Translations LLC. His many book-length publications include The River People in Flood Time: The Civil Wars in Tabasco, Spoiler of Empires (Stanford, 2014) and Epic Mexico: A History from Earliest Times (Oklahoma, 2020).