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1 Extreme violence in Mexico from the Perspective of a Cultural-Conceptual History Dr. Lizette Jacinto University of Cologne, Germany In this work I propose a theoretical approach to analyse and problematize the different aspects of the extreme violence that has been taking place in Mexico during the last decade, from the point of view of Cultural and Conceptual History. I must note that these ideas are in a stage of development and can be understood as an intellectual reaction to the awful reality that has plagued Mexico and affected negatively the lives of 112 million Mexicans. Even though this analysis focuses on Mexico, it has implications for other regions in the world as well. Violence, as we know it, respects no borders. This work attempts to analyse and explain an everyday problem using certain theoretical tools in a specific and systematic way. Before I continue, I would like to warn the audience that I am about to show a short video that contains images with a high content of violence, that although edited to diminish their visual impact, are still very explicit and crude. These images are the foundation and the justification of this work. So, if there are people in the audience that may have a problem due to the visual content of these images, they might want to leave the room and return in about 4 minutes. What I am about to show you is not fiction, it is not a trailer for a new film by Quentin Tarantino, it is the reality that is part of what Mexico has become. The main goal of my research is to carry out a critical analysis of the current extreme violence in Mexico, from the point of view of Cultural and Conceptual Histories, to comprehend its origins, its cultural implications as well as its aesthetic manifestations. To achieve this I will take certain historical “moments of conjunction of events” 1 in the history of Mexico which would allow me to study and comparatively analyse through certain concepts the history of the culture of violence in Mexico. For this, I will define a methodological synthesis that 1 The moment of conjunction of events: It is a period of time in which many different sub-regional, local or national experiences of the relation between the society and the State converge with certain conflictive intensity. The “moment of conjunction of events” is at the same time the moment in time that allows an analysis about the complexity of the modus operandi of the different structures and tendencies throughout the events established in a medium and a long duration. It is important to mention that in said moments of conjunction of events the central elements and actuators of the social relations manifest themselves, which determine the historical, political and cultural courses of a specific country, region or society. In a nutshell, synthesis, by analysing these moments of conjunction of events, a possibility arises to re-problematize them through the analysis of the relation between the immediate experience and the structural developments, considering the cultural-historical processes and their tight entailment to the Conceptual History. Cfr. Oliver, Lucio: “Discutir la coyuntura”, in: Política y Cultura. 2012, N° 37, p. 113-131. 19 p.

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    Extreme violence in Mexico from the Perspective of a Cultural-Conceptual History

    Dr. Lizette Jacinto University of Cologne, Germany

    In this work I propose a theoretical approach to analyse and problematize the different aspects

    of the extreme violence that has been taking place in Mexico during the last decade, from the

    point of view of Cultural and Conceptual History. I must note that these ideas are in a stage of

    development and can be understood as an intellectual reaction to the awful reality that has

    plagued Mexico and affected negatively the lives of 112 million Mexicans. Even though this

    analysis focuses on Mexico, it has implications for other regions in the world as well.

    Violence, as we know it, respects no borders. This work attempts to analyse and explain an

    everyday problem using certain theoretical tools in a specific and systematic way.

    Before I continue, I would like to warn the audience that I am about to show a short video

    that contains images with a high content of violence, that although edited to diminish their

    visual impact, are still very explicit and crude. These images are the foundation and the

    justification of this work. So, if there are people in the audience that may have a problem due

    to the visual content of these images, they might want to leave the room and return in about 4

    minutes. What I am about to show you is not fiction, it is not a trailer for a new film by

    Quentin Tarantino, it is the reality that is part of what Mexico has become.

    The main goal of my research is to carry out a critical analysis of the current extreme violence

    in Mexico, from the point of view of Cultural and Conceptual Histories, to comprehend its

    origins, its cultural implications as well as its aesthetic manifestations. To achieve this I will

    take certain historical moments of conjunction of events1 in the history of Mexico which

    would allow me to study and comparatively analyse through certain concepts the history of

    the culture of violence in Mexico. For this, I will define a methodological synthesis that

    1 The moment of conjunction of events: It is a period of time in which many different sub-regional, local or national experiences of the relation between the society and the State converge with certain conflictive intensity. The moment of conjunction of events is at the same time the moment in time that allows an analysis about the complexity of the modus operandi of the different structures and tendencies throughout the events established in a medium and a long duration. It is important to mention that in said moments of conjunction of events the central elements and actuators of the social relations manifest themselves, which determine the historical, political and cultural courses of a specific country, region or society. In a nutshell, synthesis, by analysing these moments of conjunction of events, a possibility arises to re-problematize them through the analysis of the relation between the immediate experience and the structural developments, considering the cultural-historical processes and their tight entailment to the Conceptual History. Cfr. Oliver, Lucio: Discutir la coyuntura, in: Poltica y Cultura. 2012, N 37, p. 113-131. 19 p.

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    would allow me to contemplate the Violence in the broadest sense as a historical process of

    long duration without the necessity of a total historical reconstruction.

    History is plagued with events related to conquests, wars and the violence in general. It is in

    this way how the history of violence is interwoven with the history of civilization. As Walter

    Benjamin used to say, there is no single document addressing culture that is not at the same

    time a document of barbarism. He was not wrong. As a paradox, violence turns out to be an

    essential component of human culture. Our contemporary societies experiment with violence

    on an everyday basis. While in certain societies violence is being consumed for entertainment

    and exploited for this purpose by the media, the video games or the cinema, in other societies

    the violence is experienced as an everyday terror manifested through assassination of men and

    women, old and young, accompanied by the complete destruction of the social fabric. These

    societies are the ones that generate the terrible examples of the manifestation of violence, that

    provide the dead and mutilated bodies, the societies that have to live with the terror, and that

    far from observing the violence in a showcase are forced to look at it from within. These are

    the societies that seem to be caught without any possibility of escape in a reality without any

    brighter future; a future, if any that contains their self destruction.

    As pointed out by Slavoj Zizek, it is worth the effort to try to see the violence in the

    contemporary societies from the point of view proposed by Karl Marx, i.e. as a consequence

    of the Capitalism, especially if addressing the culture of violence in the 20th and the 21st

    centuries. And when talking about Capitalism we are also addressing the circulation of capital

    and its normally uneven distribution. According to several reports issued during the last

    decades by the different institutions of the, e.g. the United Nations, Latin America is perhaps

    the continent with the highest indexes of economic inequality. It is the continent where the

    smallest proportion of the population owns the highest proportion of the gross domestic

    product (GDP) and vice versa, the biggest part of the population, the poor, own the smallest

    proportion of the GDP. Taking Mexico as an example, according to the reports for the year

    2013 of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)2, there 35

    millions of people (31.25% of the total population) must survive with less than 2$ a day, and

    10 millions (approx. 9% of the total population) must survive with less than 1$ a day. This

    means, and corroborated by the Mexican National Council for the Evaluation of Social

    2OECD(2013),OECDEconomicSurveys:Mexico2013,OECDPublishing.http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/eco_surveysmex2013en

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    Development Policy (COVAL) in 20113, that 46.2 % of the Mexican population lives in

    poverty according to the United Nations poverty standards. On the other hand, according to

    the billionaires list of Forbes magazine, the Mexican (billionaire) Carlos Slim Hel has the

    very first place among the wealthiest men on earth with $73 Billions, accompanied by another

    two Mexicans among the first 100 wealthiest men on earth, and making altogether 9

    Mexicans in the first 650 places of the list, the sum of their wealth being approximately 10 %

    of the gross domestic product of Mexico.

    Nevertheless, it is important to take into account other elements too in order to analyse the

    culture of violence present in Mexico. This analysis can reach back in history even before the

    appearance of the Spanish conquerors and their cultural justification of the extreme violence,

    practiced within their theocratic society -promoting slavery and human sacrifices in the

    manner of death penalties ordered, for example, by the Inquisition to reinforce their own

    theories about the origin of the Universe-, not really different in these aspects to the Aztec

    society they found in America.

    (Foto 1, 2, 3: Cipactli Tezcatlipoca-Quetzalcotl)

    1

    During the last 20 years the violence in Mexico has been constantly growing. This tendency

    increased in the years between the 2006 and 2012, during the Presidency of Felipe Caldern

    Hinojosa member of the conservative Partido Accin Nacional (PAN), promoted in the first

    place by the openly declared so called war on drugs, a war carried out by the Mexican

    government and the Mexican army against the different drug dealers organizations, the so

    called cartels. The war on drugs created favourable conditions for violent confrontations

    between the federal government and the different cartels, as well as between the different

    cartels themselves for the control and empowerment of different illegal drug markets, where

    new actors appeared, the so called sicarios, assassins or hitmen, hired by the different

    cartel bosses to fight the competition in a specially bloody manner. The armed

    confrontation between all these actors turned into a routine causing as a collateral damage a

    huge amount of civilian casualties, where civilians are defined as any person with no

    known affiliation to any of the drug cartels or the Mexican army or federal police. The

    number of civilian casualties oscillates between 40,000 and 90,000 for the period since

    December 1, 2006, depending on the source. The identity of approximately 40% of the

    3http://www.coneval.gob.mx/Medicion/Paginas/Pobrezaporingresosen.aspx

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    victims is still not known. Additionally, there are approximately 25,000 missing persons and a

    similar amount of displaced. An uncertain number of common graves (narco-fosas) has

    been also found since 2006.

    (Foto 4 y 5: Tablas Watt-Zepeda basados en el diario mexicano Reforma).

    One of the big problems when dealing with the facts surrounding this war on drugs is the

    lack of precise official statistics : we still lack any official confirmation of the identity and

    real number of the dead, displaced or missing persons.

    The current academic studies dealing with the violence in Mexico are mainly focused on the

    interfamily violence, as well as -and based on the painful case of Ciudad Jurez-, the so called

    feminicides: the brutal and normally unpunished torture and assassination of mostly poor

    young women, workers at local factories. Another part of the academic production deals with

    the geographic extensions of the so called Narcozonas, the regions where the most powerful

    cartels have succeeded to conquer through violence. The other topics addressed

    thoroughly in different studies are the biographies of the most influential cartel bosses and

    drug dealers, as well as the commercial and political networks created around them, where the

    appearance of members of the Mexican political elite is no exception. One of the most

    representative studies dealing with these topics is the book Los seores del narco by Anabel

    Hernndez. Finally, there is the aspect of social activists and activist groups being directly

    affected for their sometimes uncomfortable discoveries in the matter of public policies and

    levels of corruption within all the layers of the Mexican political system. The generalized

    war on drugs scenario facilitates the disappearance of several activist groups, as part of

    the collateral casualties of this war.

    (Foto: 7 y 8 : Jurez fronteras y feminicidios, narcozones)

    In this particular study nevertheless, we attempt to contextualize the explosion of the extreme

    violence in Mexico and its cultural manifestations during the last decade as part of the culture

    of violence that has existed and evolved in Mexico throughout its entire history. For this, our

    main aim is to extend the focus beyond the 21st century and focus the analysis of the extreme

    violence as a historical process of long duration, as defined by the French historian Fernand

    Braudel.

    As stressed by Zigmunt Baumann, Max Weber defined the modern state as that entity which

    upholds the claim to the monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force in the enforcement

    of its order, not subject to any appellation or compensation of any kind (Baumann 2002:10

    La sociedad sitiada). In the case of Mexico, the monopoly of violence has stopped to be the

    exclusive matter of the Mexican state, at least in certain geographic extensions, claimed by

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    the fittest, most violent and best organized group of individuals, not being part of the legal

    State, and normally engaged in criminal acts. The explosion of the extreme violence in

    Mexico is a consequence of a failed state policy defined to eradicate the illegal drug market in

    Mexico starting in 2006, the poorly chosen strategy for this purpose, and a very high index of

    corruption within the Mexican political elite as well as its armed forces and local and federal

    police organizations. The Frontal strikes on existing drug-dealing organizations in 2006 has

    multiplied the number of newly organized ones, currently spread all over the national territory

    in contrast to the clear territorial concentration it had before the beginning of the war on

    drugs. Several other authors point out as another reason the urge president Caldern had in

    2006 to legitimize the controversial elections which he won in suspicious circumstances with

    only 0.56 % advance ahead of his opponents in the ballots.

    2

    Before I continue, I would like to stress that this study is not based on the premise that there

    are certain societies more prone to violence than others. Nevertheless, this study focuses on

    the cultural manifestation and the aesthetic dimension of the current extreme violence in

    Mexico -an approach not much pursued so far-, that seeks to understand the cultural

    dimension of this phenomenon in opposition to the studies focused only on its immediate

    causes. Perhaps there is a profound root of the culture of violence in the society inhabiting

    the territory nowadays known as Mexico dating from the pre-columbine period that evolved

    over the years of the colonial period, merged with the Eurasian tradition brought by the

    Spanish from the Iberian peninsula, and finally got transformed during the Mexican war for

    independence, the Mexican revolution, and Mexican contemporary history only to manifest

    itself in the way it does in the beginning of the 21st century. Thus, the main questions in this

    work are: how did we turn so extremely violent?, where do the practices of

    dismemberment of the human body come from?, what is the significance of practices of

    over-killing? or how is it possible that ordinary people become capable of such acts in a

    contemporary society?.

    In each period of time or each moment of conjunction of historical events, as it is called

    within this study, chosen for a thorough analysis of the Concepts chosen, many characteristic

    features can be found defined by a certain historicity predating that moment: trails that can be

    followed to understand the way in which the Violence was thought of and the role it played in

    the society under study in that certain period of time. In this work, the ritual of human

    sacrifice in the prehispanic central plateau of todays Mexico will be considered as the first

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    moment of conjunction of historical events. Its characteristics can by no means be applied to

    the analysis of the manifestation of extreme violence in its current form, context or its

    consequences for the future of the Mexican society. It must be redefined. In another moment

    in history, the culture of violence gets much more explicit: it is analysed during the Spanish

    conquest of Latin America, where instead of speaking about a clash of cultures or -in a

    more euphemistic manner- about an encounter of cultures, we should be speaking about a

    classical case of a military, cultural and symbolic conquest of the territories across the sea

    justified as a quest for spiritual salvation of the indigenous population through evangelization.

    Moreover, if we analyse now the culture of violence during the colonial times, it must be

    considered in a close relation to the culture of resistance practiced by indigenous

    individuals or whole tribes. The terrible result was that from a total of 90 million people

    estimated to have lived in Mexico at the beginning of the 16th century, there was only 5 % of

    this number of indigenous inhabitants of Mexico left in the 17th century. Considering the

    European roots of the current culture of violence brought to America by the first

    conquerors, in the third place the study of the baroque movement in its cultural, aesthetic and

    philosophical aspects will be carried out, giving us an opportunity to understand its influence

    on the cultural and philosophical developments during the colonial times. The aesthetic

    dimension of the everyday life to be found in the architecture, the paintings and other artistic

    expressions from this period, the melodramatic aspects of the everyday life, especially in the

    mestizo middle class of the New Spain, also found their inspiration in the similar

    developments occurring in Europe at that time, imitating the values of the Spanish catholic

    and conservative society, taking them sometimes to an extreme, but also mixing them with

    influences coming from the indigenous population on the one side, but also (from) the slaves

    brought from Africa or the traditions merged into the Iberian culture throughout the 800 years

    of Arabic presence on the peninsula on the other. The human body, the presence of which was

    almost erased during the middle Ages, found in the baroque world a place to express itself

    constructing a peculiar mystique experience of the body in its secular and sensorial aspects.

    The study of the aesthetic expressions of the baroque allows us to analyse the concepts of

    rituality and human body and their relation with the key concept of violence. The baroque

    thought is defined through ethos, a principle of construction of the world of life that

    operates based on the intentions of the individuals (Echeverra, 2011:37)

    (Foto 6: Caravaggio)

    In the colonial world, the fourth moment of history addressed in this work, we confront

    uprising insurgent movements against the colonial ruling system. Nevertheless, the culture of

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    violence in Mexico of that time is not only nurtured by this type of open violence exercised

    by the insurgents on the one side, and the established State on the other. There are also

    expressions of violence elsewhere; for example, hidden in the very complex system of casts

    dividing the society in many different levels, based on racial studies of the time, or present in

    the constant fights taking place between the numerous criminal groups dedicated to large

    scale smuggling of goods and the soldiers of the Spanish crown. Later, and specially during

    the war for Independence and the consolidation of the nation state in the 19th century,

    violence turns out to be an unavoidable element of the novels describing everyday life and

    customs of the independent Mexico, as it is the case of the novel Los bandidos de Ro Fro

    (The bandits of Ro Fro) by Manuel Payno. All this violence, experienced in an open or a

    hidden manner, during the chaotic Mexican 19th century paved the road toward the Mexican

    revolution that started in 1910 as the first revolution of the 20th century worldwide with a

    dominant agrarian content, in response to the long dictatorship of the General Porfirio Daz,

    who ruled between 1876 and 1911 and managed to concentrate the monopoly of violence in

    his hands and the hands of his repressive apparatus in these years, with fatal consequences. As

    stated by Friedrich Katz, an Austrian historian, the Mexican revolution was, among many

    other attributes, a response against dispossession. The Mexican revolution caused the loss of

    approximately one million lives. The culture of violence and death evolved once again and

    found a new meaning in the collective subconscious of the Mexican society. The graphic

    work of Jos Guadalupe Posada is one illustrative example of the re-significance of the motif

    of the Death present in the major part of his work.

    (Foto: Catrina-Posada)

    The history of Mexico offers an interesting opportunity to reconsider the violence and the

    theory used for its study from another perspective: to open new queries within a process of

    long duration and not exclusively considering one single event or one single period of time, as

    it could be the so called war on drugs started by the Mexican former President Felipe

    Caldern Hinojosa in 2006.

    3

    Conceptual History, as defined by Reinhardt Koselleck, focuses on concepts related to the

    political changes within a society and the changes in the significance of those concepts in

    different periods of time within that society. In this work, I try to find a thread I could follow

    throughout a historical process of long duration, which in this case is the culture of

    Violence, using Concepts or Schlsselbegriffe, applying the approach proposed by Koselleck

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    to a completely different discipline: Cultural History. If we assume that cultural changes are

    almost imperceptible and can be seized only after several generations on a social level, than

    we must admit that analysing historical developments on a long duration scale and describing

    them all would require a life time or even more of historical work. But, what would happen if

    instead of analysing all the different historical aspects of all the events (or as many as

    possible) taking place in a society over a long period of time, we could only analyze the

    changes in the significance of certain Concepts describing the process of long duration of our

    interest, in our case the culture of Violence, and the relations among these Concepts, and do

    this not by considering the entire history, but only choosing certain decisive moments of

    conjunction of historical events of the society under study to do it.

    The proposed theoretical approach aims at the possibility of finding behavioural patterns

    within the society that could indicate a development on the practical and symbolic planes in

    the culture of violence in Mexico, or any other territory or society for that matter.

    Bearing the latter in mind, four main Concepts were defined to be analysed, separately and in

    their relation to the culture of violence as well as the relation among themselves; in both, a

    synchronic and a diachronic form. These four main Concepts are: 1) Rituality, 2) Body, 3)

    Gender, and 4) Identity-Mexicanity.

    1) Rituality

    This is a rather unexplored concept in the context of extreme violence. In her book Ritual and

    Violence, the Canadian historian Natalie Zemon Davis wonders how different areas of

    knowledge can be combined to allow a better comprehension of different patterns of human

    behaviour that we might, up to a certain level, define as traditional. In this sense, cultural

    anthropology, ethnography and critical literature interact in order to problematize and

    contextualize the topic of extreme violence, especially if studied from the point of view of the

    long duration. In the concept of Rituality there are different and fully differentiated

    behavioural patterns that interact in the process of adopting certain identities and social

    aspirations as well as religious beliefs. The certain specific cultural phenomena that has

    evolved around the activities of Mexican drug dealers, sometimes denominated the

    Narcocultura (Foto: Santa Muerte) is one of the most recent cultural phenomenon related to

    the violence surrounding the cartels and their reality, that reflects in a very plastic way this

    newly established tradition and the apprehension of this system of beliefs by this entire

    social group. The study of the concept of Rituality involves a symbolic reinterpretation of the

    reality, in this case the extreme violence. Some of the questions that arise with relation to this

    concept are, for example, how does a ritual of death implying assassination of a human being

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    looks like?, how do criminals and hired assassins sicarios associate to commit crime, to

    assassin or to torture?, how do they interact or even recognize each other while committing

    crime, murder, mutilation or kidnapping?, is an act of extreme violence planned or does it

    normally happen spontaneously?, basically what is the role of a ritual in the conformation

    of the atmosphere of extreme violence in Mexico?, can we talk about certain behavioural

    patterns? Our main goal in this sense would be to try and define patterns within the social

    behaviour ignored by historians that could indicate the manner in which the extreme violence

    arises; the way in which several individuals get together to commit an act of such extreme

    violence. An important characteristic to be taken into account for the study of the concept of

    Rituality is the heterogeneous analysis that must be undertaken for this purpose. The rituals

    and their symbolic forms should not be understood as homogeneous within a certain society,

    not even when these rituals have as a common goal incitement toward a recurrent criminal

    behaviour. The Rituality combines the cultural implications of tradition (even a new

    tradition) and performance giving birth to new forms of expression, in this case the culture

    of extreme violence as it is currently experienced in Mexico.

    2) Body

    Almost all the studies involving an interaction between the body and violence make an almost

    intrinsic connection between the body and the gender or sexual violence. These studies focus

    on the concept of the punished body, the body understood as an object. What I would like to

    stress is that in situations involving violence or extreme violence, the Body experiences a

    constant transition between being the object of violence on the one side, and being an

    embodiment of that violence, in a sense defined by Bourdieu, and reflect that experienced

    violence in a process of reconfiguration of social practices that would in other circumstances

    be completely unacceptable, on the other. It is a complex phenomenon. The reconfiguration of

    the way in which a society experiences the forms of violence takes place and turns

    expressions of extreme violence that were unacceptable in the beginning of this process into a

    socially accepted everyday life which, although not justified, becomes at least bearable,

    multiplying itself. This phenomenon embodiment of extreme violence can be observed

    within the societies specially exposed to violent acts perpetrated by the cartels in Mexico,

    expression of which becomes more and more brutal. In his book Discipline and Punish: The

    Birth of Prison (1967), Michel Foucault describes a terrible example of how a justification for

    the use of extreme violence in prisons conforms with the Modern State based on the

    monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force in the enforcement of order. The exemplary

    punishment of the parricide Damiens, described by Foucault, found guilty of assassination of

  • 10

    his father, is condemned, in a practice inherited from the middle ages, to die dismembered

    pulled by four horses, burned by fire and dragged through the streets of Paris. This

    punishment is described in an order written in 1760 in which it was stated that during this

    terrible torture in what the spectacle is concerned, the culprit does not suffer much nor for a

    long time. What happens currently in Mexico where the news about the dismembered, the

    asphyxiated, the beheaded, the stabbed, those whose bodies are hidden in barrels, those whose

    bodies get disintegrated through chemical reactions, those assassinated by machineguns,

    pistols or grenades have become everyday news? A distinctive body (again Bourdieu) within

    the world of extreme violence plays the main role. It is through these punished bodies

    (dismembered, beheaded, asphyxiated, tortured) how threatening (messages) are being

    communicated to the rival organizations on the one hand, and the responsible authorities (the

    police, the army members, the State) on the other. On the other hand, the same government in

    Mexico carries out a necrophileous communication policy, where day after day new numbers

    of the dead are communicated to the public, a policy which should justify the efforts for

    pacification of this State still claiming that it has the monopoly of the legitimate use of

    physical force in the enforcement of its order. Simultaneously, the capos -the cartel

    bosses- use these dead bodies, normally showing written massages on papers stabbed to their

    chests or even through huge announcements hanging on highway bridges, to show to the

    society the power they really have, even over human lives, without being apprehended,

    judged or sentenced. There is no state of law, no right to live, no second chances. The body

    becomes an object; the opponent gets depersonified becoming just a warning, a simple

    message: a death threat. The embodiment of power takes place and through it the violence

    gets monopolized and fear spreads.

    3) Gender-Masculinity

    The main concept of Gender is a socially constructed category that generates behavioural

    patterns related to interaction of power and expresses itself through cultural manifestations.

    According to Elisabeth Lienert, the gender roles, masculinity and femininity, are known to

    be social constructs in a constant historical transformation. Violence is one key component

    of said social constructs. The concepts such as disposition towards violence, the monopoly of

    violence, the delinquents or the role of the victims have been well studied. The concept of

    Gender necessarily implies the construction of an identity, the same that determines the

    behavioural patterns. It is a category that is normally defined only in terms of gender in

    general, as well as the amounts of masculinity, the femininity and the differences between

    different hierarchies, hegemonies that practice violence (Messerschmidt 2005) and (Schlper

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    2008). From my point of view, gender and violence are tied together in the spectrum of

    escalation of extreme violence in the contemporary Mexico.

    4) Identity construction: Mexicanity (Mexicaness - Leopoldo Zea)

    The concept of Mexicanity has as a predecessor the concept of Identity, the creation of which

    must necessarily be understood as a process of long duration. Mexicanity has been used as a

    concept only recently, basically since the period of the so called mexican nationalism taking

    place during the Presidency of the General Lzaro Crdenas in the 1930s and 1940s. This

    term has been used in the first place to refer to the behavioural characteristics of a Mexican, to

    the construction of the Mexican identity and its different features, but also in reference to the

    aesthetic developed within the cultural and artistic expressions in Mexico, especially

    immediately after the Mexican Revolution. The concept Mexicanity denotes an aesthetic

    tendency inspired primarily by the rescued indigenous cultures in Mexico in those years (this

    can be observed, for example, in the exhibition entitled Mexicanity that took place in

    Berlin, where the work of the Mexican artists Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Rufino Tamayo,

    Francisco Toledo and Adolfo Riestra was shown to the public. But in this work, the concept

    of Mexicanity also includes the realities such as marginality, femaleness / maleness,

    passiveness, or submissiveness that interact with many other characteristics to define the

    behavioural patterns of a Mexican. There is even an aspect of Mexicanity defined as a hybrid

    experience gained through contacts, exchange and culture mixture between Mexicans and

    other cultural experiences. It is an attempt to free this concept from the superficial stereotypes

    that accompany the Mexicans. Finally, bearing in mind that this study is not based on the

    premise that there are certain societies more prone to violence than others, the main

    question is what causes such extreme violence within any society, and also what are its

    characteristics from the point of view of the cultural history of that particular society.

    Thank you very much for your attention!