Satire and the lie of politics: El Mono (México, 1833)

Abstract The Mexican weekly El Mono (February 1833-June 1833) was a short-lived conservative satirical newspaper that launched a sustained attack against the liberal government Valentín Gómez Farías and Antonio López de Santa Anna. Sustained by a mode of satire that it drew from a 1749 novel by Ital...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gutiérrez Negrón,Sergio
Language:English
Published: Universidad Academia Humanismo Cristiano.Escuela de Historia 2020
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Online Access:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0719-56992020000100017
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Summary:Abstract The Mexican weekly El Mono (February 1833-June 1833) was a short-lived conservative satirical newspaper that launched a sustained attack against the liberal government Valentín Gómez Farías and Antonio López de Santa Anna. Sustained by a mode of satire that it drew from a 1749 novel by Italian Counter Enlightenment satirist Zaccaria Seriman, El Mono’s editors undermined the conceptual foundations of liberal politics: popular sovereignty, public opinion and political action. Ultimately, for the editors, liberal politics responded neither to logic nor rational ideas, but to private vices. Thus, they held that the only stable grounds for society was morality, tradition and custom. In this paper, I show how this critique could only be developed through the use of Juvenalian satire. It is the immanent logic of this form of satire which structures El Mono’s critique and which, as a result of the newspapers’ popularity and effectiveness, went on to become integral to future conservative discourse in Mexico.