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Biography:

Justo Sierra

Justo Sierra (1848-1912) was a Mexican educator, writer, and historian. As one of Mexico's leading liberal historians and as minister of education, he was responsible for considerable educational reform and expansion during the first decade of the 20th century.

Justo Sierra was born in Campeche, Yucatán, on Jan. 26, 1848. His father, Justo Sierra O'Rielly, was one of Yucatán's foremost intellectuals. Young Sierra studied in Campeche and Mexico City, receiving a law degree at the age of 23. Elected to the Mexican Congress in 1872, he quickly gained a reputation as a formidable debater. He served 2 years on the Supreme Court prior to his designation as subsecretary of justice and public education in 1902. In 1905 he was appointed minister of public education and fine arts, a post which he held until the fall of the regime of Gen. Porfirio Díaz in 1911.

Sierra insisted that educational progress parallel economic growth, both to train the populace in the requisite skills and to preserve the national identity in the face of an influx of foreign capital and methodology. Consequently, he stressed science and Mexican history in his curriculum. In 1910 he sponsored the First National Congress of Primary Education and revived the National University of Mexico, which had splintered into separate colleges.

One of the foremost propagandists of his day, Sierra edited and wrote regular columns for several newspapers. Though a member of the Díaz Cabinet, he did not hesitate to criticize the regime and never fully accepted the positivism that constituted the official ideology. Maintaining an independent intellectual stance, he considered himself primarily a humanist.

Sierra is best known for his voluminous historical works. Although he attempted to synthesize the broad sweep of human development for the general reader in his Historia general (1896), most of his volumes focused on Mexican history. His interpretation was liberal, and he contended that Mexico had experienced only two revolutions worthy of the name: the Independence movement and the War of the Reform (1854-1867). In México: su evolución social (1902), Sierra argued that the Díaz era was the culmination of Mexican development. He defended Benito Juárez in Juárez: su obra y su tiempo (1905), contending that his era of liberal government constituted the pivotal period of Mexican history.

Sierra's most famous work is La evolución política del pueblo mexicano (1900-1902; The Political Evolution of the Mexican Nation, 1946), intended as a "popular synthesis." In this volume he applied the prevailing evolutionary theories to Mexican history, emphasizing the importance of the liberal revolution of the mid-19th century. He condemned the Mexican leaders of the early portion of that century as petty individuals seeking only self-aggrandizement.

After the collapse of the Díaz regime in 1911, Sierra was appointed ambassador to Spain. He died in Madrid on Sept. 13, 1912.

Further Reading

The best source available in English on Sierra is the introduction to his The Political Evolution of the Mexican Nation, translated by Charles Ramsdell, with notes and introduction by Edmundo O'Gorman (1969). William Rex Crawford, A Century of Latin-American Thought (1944; rev. ed. 1961), discusses Sierra's ideas. Carlos González Peña, History of Mexican Literature (trans. 1943; 3d ed. 1968), examines Sierra's life and career.

 
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Sierra, Justo
('stō syĕ') , 1848–1912, Mexican educator and historian. He entered the literary life as a romantic poet but later devoted himself wholeheartedly to founding schools, lecturing, and seeking in every way to quicken new intellectual life in Mexico. Sierra was to a large extent responsible for the intellectual renaissance in Mexico early in the 20th cent. He was minister of education under Porfirio Díaz and refounded the National Univ. of Mexico. His best-known work is a history of Mexico showing the growth of national feeling and culture, La evolución política del pueblo mexicano (1900–1902, tr. 1969).

Bibliography

See study by R. W. Weatherhead (1966).

 
Wikipedia: Justo Sierra


Justo Sierra Méndez (Campeche, México, January 26, 1848 - Madrid, Spain, September 13, 1912), was a prominent Mexican writer, journalist[1], poet and political figure of the second half of the nineteenth century. He was the son of Mexican novelist Justo Sierra O'Reilly, who is credited with inspiring his son with the spirit of literature. Sierra moved to Mexico City at the age of 13 in 1861, the year of his father's death, and also, coincidentally, the year of the French intervention in Mexico. Together with his fellow young students, Sierra responded with patriotic fervor to the invasion of his country, and became a lifelong militant liberal. His most enduring works are sociopolitical histories (at time verging on memoirs) of the era of Benito Juárez and Porfirio Díaz, particularly his political biography of Juárez and his Evolución política del pueblo mexicano, which Antonio Caso considered the definitive statement of the age of the Reform in Mexico. He was elected a member of the Mexican Academy of the Language in 1887, and served as the Academy's sixth director from 1910 until his death in 1912.

Public service. Elected to several terms as a representative in the federal Chamber of Deputies, Sierra also served the government in various posts. From 1905 to 1911 he agreed to serve as the Secretary of Public Education under the Díaz dictatorship; however, he never made a secret of his liberal sympathies and his distaste for the politics of the dictatorship. After the overthrow of Díaz and the election of Francisco I. Madero at the outset of the Mexican Revolution, Madero chose Sierra to serve as the Mexican ambassador to Spain. He died in Madrid in 1912 while serving in his post; his remains were returned to Mexico, where Madero himself presided over his magnificent funerales.

Partial list of works

  • Compendio de historia general, México, 1878
  • Compendio de la historia de la antigüedad, México, 1880
  • Confesiones de un pianista, México, 1882
  • Historia general, México, 1891
  • Cuentos románticos, México, 1896, 1934, 1946
  • Juárez. Su obra y su tiempo, México, 1905-1906
  • Historia de México. La Conquista. La Nueva España, Madrid, 1917
  • Prosas, México, 1917
  • Poemas, México, 1917
  • Discursos, México, 1919
  • Poesías, 1842-1912, México, 1937
  • Evolución política del pueblo mexicano, México, 1940
  • Justo Sierra. Prosas, México, 1939
  • Obras completas, XV vols., México, 1948-1949.

References

  • This article draws on the biography of Sierra by the Academia Mexicana de la Lengua (in Spanish), and on Sierra's works.
  • The Independent National University of Mexico published his complete Works with the direction of Agustín Yáñez in the 1940's.

See also


 
 

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Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Justo Sierra" Read more

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