List of Illustrations
Foreword. Killing the Messenger: The Perils of Committing Journalism
Judith Matloff
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Journalism, Satire, and Censorship in Mexico
Paul Gillingham, Michael Lettieri, and Benjamin T. Smith
Chapter One. Notes for a History of the Press in Mexico
Pablo Piccato
Chapter Two. Journalists on Trial: The Press, Censorship, and the Law, 1898-1920
Ana María Serna Rodríguez
Chapter Three. Changing Opinions in La Opinión: Maximino Ávila Camacho and the Puebla Press, 1936-1941
Andrew Paxman
Chapter Four. The Year Mexico Stopped Laughing: The Crowd, Satire, and Censorship in Mexico City
Benjamin T. Smith
Chapter Five. In the Service of the Gremio: Bus Industry Magazines, PRI Corporatism, and the Politics of Trade Publications
Michael Lettieri
Chapter Six. The Regional Press Boom, c. 1945-1965: How Much News Was Fit to Print?
Paul Gillingham
Chapter Seven. "The Invisible Tyranny"; or, The Origin of the "Perfect Dictatorship"
Jacinto Rodríguez Munguía
Chapter Eight. The Cartoons of Abel Quezada
Roderic Ai Camp
Chapter Nine. Testing the Limits of Censorship? Política Magazine and the "Perfect Dictatorship," 1960-1967
Renata Keller
Chapter Ten. Censorship in the Headlines: National News and the Contradictions of Mexico City's Press Opening in the 1970s
Vanessa Freije
Chapter Eleven. Democratization and the Regional Press
Javier Garza Ramos
Chapter Twelve. Between the Imperius Curse and The Matrix: Attacks on Journalists in Mexico
Rafael Barajas
Chapter Thirteen. The Plaza Is for the Populacho, the Desert Is for Deep-Sea Fish: Lessons from la Nota Roja
Everard Meade
Chapter Fourteen. Front Lines and Back Channels: The Fractal Publics of El Blog del Narco
Paul K. Eiss
Bibliography
Contributors
Index