"Based on eighteen months of field work, oral interviews, and extensive archival research, Elena McGraths book opens a new window into Bolivias epic and everyday struggles over the meanings and boundaries of "worker citizenship" for male mine workers, women, their families, and their communities during the long MNR revolution (19521964) and beyond. The author makes skillful use of trial records and other primary sources to capture vivid images and make audible the "voices" of both women and men who lived through the promises and betrayals of revolution. The result is a stunning local history that contributes to broader historiographical themes, such as Latin American labor studies, extractive capitalism, social revolution, and gender history."- Brooke Larson, Stony Brook University, author of The Lettered Indian: Race, Nation, and Indigenous Education in Twentieth-Century Bolivia
"Ambitious, well-researched, and compellingly narrated, The Limits of Revolution paints an intricate picture of Corocoro rich in contextual details. Yet this book is far more than a regional history. It uses Corocoro to make significant interventions into the literature on the Bolivian state, the 1952 Revolution, gender, class formation, and the spectrum of ethnic identity. The book portrays Corocoros miners in the larger frame of national and global economic forces, explaining how capital and commodity prices shaped local militancy." - Elizabeth Shesko, Oakland University, author of Conscript Nation: Coercion and Citizenship in the Bolivian Barracks