"Turning our gaze away from Mexico City and from conventional art historical stylistic accounts, this remarkable scholarly study offers an important corrective to our understanding of colonial architecture and urbanism in Mexico. The book discusses the cultural and intellectual primary sources behind the impulses that crystallized in the urban design and major architecture of Puebla de los Įngeles, an important paradigm for Viceregal Mexico."
Dr. Alberto Pérez-Gómez, Bronfman Professor of the History of Architecture, McGill University, Montreal
"Todays debates in architecture are finally revisiting the role that our discipline played in the mechanisms of colonization. Burkes discussion of Puebla, Mexico, is a significant step in that direction for the author dissects how the built environment was an integral part of the process of colonizing spaces and peoples of the Americas."
Fernando Luiz Lara, Professor and Director of PhD Program in Architecture at the University of Texas at Austin
"Mythically founded by angels as an embodiment of Heavenly Jerusalem, the town of Puebla soon became a complex multicultural city in need of constantly reimagining its utopian origins through the medium of building. In synthetically retelling its story from perspectives that range from theology to architectural theory, Burke has made an invaluable contribution to the study of early-modern age urbanism."
Juan Manuel Heredia, Associate Professor of Architecture, Portland State University "Turning our gaze away from Mexico City and from conventional art historical stylistic accounts, this remarkable scholarly study offers an important corrective to our understanding of colonial architecture and urbanism in Mexico. The book discusses the cultural and intellectual primary sources behind the impulses that crystallized in the urban design and major architecture of Puebla de los Įngeles, an important paradigm for Viceregal Mexico."
Dr. Alberto Pérez-Gómez, Bronfman Professor of the History of Architecture, McGill University, Montreal
"Todays debates in architecture are finally revisiting the role that our discipline played in the mechanisms of colonization. Burkes discussion of Puebla, Mexico, is a significant step in that direction for the author dissects how the built environment was an integral part of the process of colonizing spaces and peoples of the Americas."
Fernando Luiz Lara, Professor and Director of PhD Program in Architecture at the University of Texas at Austin
"Mythically founded by angels as an embodiment of Heavenly Jerusalem, the town of Puebla soon became a complex multicultural city in need of constantly reimagining its utopian origins through the medium of building. In synthetically retelling its story from perspectives that range from theology to architectural theory, Burke has made an invaluable contribution to the study of early-modern age urbanism."
Juan Manuel Heredia, Associate Professor of Architecture, Portland State University
"Architecture and Urbanism offers an indispensable introduction to the rich, underutilized archives and libraries whose documents narrate the urban history of early colonial Mexicos second city, Puebla de los Įngeles. Burke presents a coherent narrative about the development of the citys urban form and principal monuments, integrating Spanish-language scholarship and regional archival sources with English-language literature."
Esquivel, S., (2024) New Spain's Second City: Architecture and Urbanism of Puebla de los Įngeles, Architectural Histories.