Cabrera Rivera Daniel (3 results)

Published by Oficina Estatal de Conservación Histórica, Oficina del Gobernador (OECH) 2020
- Softcover
Seller: Librairie Thé à la page, Montélimar, , FranceLibrairie Thé à la page
Contact seller5-star sellerCondition: Used - Fair
US$ 238.45
US$ 16.21 shippingShips from France to U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Couverture souple. Condition: Moyen. Oficina Estatal de Conservación Histórica, Oficina del Gobernador (OECH) collection , 2020. 1 volume format In-4 acceptable.
More imagesEl Hijo del Ahuizote (Segunda Epoca, Tomi II) Numero 1-64 (complete)
Daniel Cabrera Rivera, Manuel Pérez Bibbins, and Juan Sarabia (et al)
Published by Mexico 1886
- Softcover
- First Edition
Seller: Pazzo Books, Boston, MA, U.S.A.Pazzo Books
Contact seller5-star sellerSoftcover. Condition: Near Fine Condition. First Edition. 64 issues, all of Tomo II of this important satirical weekly. September 5 1886 - December 25, 1887. Each issue 8pp with a cover illustration in color and internal (usually a two page spread) illustrations in black and white. Issues 22 and 41 with no cover illustration but… with a 4 page fold out color illustration. 8.5" x 12.5". (issues 22 and 41 17" x 25"). Slight browning in spots, minor wear at edges, a few splits at folds of fold-outs; extremely well preserved overall. Daniel Cabrera Rivera named El Hijo after a short-lived journal founded by José María Villasana in 1874 that also had a satirical, caricature driven, bent. The Ahuizote is an important creature in Aztec mythology, thought to be a water possum, it, supposedly lured men to their deaths. Cortes, in fact, reported that one of his men was killed by an ahuizote. The journal was relentlessly derisive of Porfirio Diaz and a key reviver of the Mexican Enlightenment that was under attack by Diaz and his anti-democratic reforms. It was ordered to cease publication numberous times, popping up under related names. It was closed for good in 1903 when much of its staff was arrested after they flew a banner reading "La Constitución ha muerto" on the 46th anniversary of the Mexican constitution. Size: Quarto (4to). Illustrator: Figaro; Jesús Martínez Carrión et al. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Sociology & Culture; Inventory No: 049684. Figaro; Jesús Martínez Carrión et al (illustrator).
EL HIJO DEL AHUIZOTE. SEGUNDA EDICION. NOS. 1-5, 7-39.; Semanario feroz, aunque de nobles instintos, politico y sin subvencion como su padre, y como su padre, matrero y calaveron (no tiene madre)
Cabrera Rivera, Daniel; Manuel Perez Bibbins; Juan Sarabia (eds.)
Published by Mexico City 1885
Seller: Libros Latinos, Redlands, CA, U.S.A.Libros Latinos
Contact seller4-star sellerCondition: Used - Very good
US$ 3,400.00
US$ 6.00 shippingShips within U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Condition: Very Good. Second edition. 38 vols., illus., wrps. A run of the liberal political satire periodical El Hijo del Ahuizote, containing all but number six of the first 39 issues, published in the mid-1880s. The first three editions of the weekly quickly sold out despite a ban that was placed by the government of Porfirio… Diaz who was El Hijo's prime target. The title of the paper was itself a parodic take on a popular pro-Diaz paper called El Ahuizote. The ban on El Hijo prompted the publishers to temporarily assume other satiric monikers, such as El Padre del Ahuizote, El Nieto del Ahuizote, and El Bisnieto del Ahuizote (per the title, El Ahuizote lacked a mother). In 1902, the anarchist siblings Ricardo and Enrique Flores Magon joined the paper before their exile in 1904. More recently, the building which housed the print shop where El Hijo del Ahuizote was re-discovered by one of the Magon's great-grandchildren and turned into a museum.