Azuela was born in
Lagos de Moreno,
Jalisco to a small, but successful rancher, Evaristo Azuela and Paulina Azuela, on January 1, 1873. He grew up in a small farm owned by his father, which later influences the settings in many of his fictional works. He was first admitted to a Catholic seminary at the age of fourteen, but soon abandoned his religious studies. He studied medicine in
Guadalajara, Jalisco. He received his M.D. in 1899, practicing medicine first in his home town of Lagos de Moreno, and later, after the Mexican revolution, practiced in
Mexico City. In 1900, he married Carmen Rivera, niece of Agustín Rivera, priest and historian of Lagos de Moreno. He went on to have five sons and five daughters. Like most young students, Azuela was opposed to the dictatorship of the
Porfirio Díaz regime. During his days in the
Mexican Revolution, Azuela wrote about the war and its impact on Mexico. After Porfirio Díaz was overthrown in 1911, Azuela served as state Director of Education of Jalisco under President
Francisco I. Madero. Following Madero's 1913 assassination, Azuela joined the
Constitutionalist cause, which sought to restore the
rule of law. He traveled with the military forces of Julián Medina, a follower of
Pancho Villa, where he served as a field doctor. His participation in the conflict gave him ample material to write
Los de abajo (
The Underdogs) (1915). He later was forced for a time to emigrate to
El Paso, Texas, when the counterrevolutionary forces of
Victoriano Huerta were temporarily triumphant. It was there that he wrote
Los de abajo, which was his first-hand description of combat during the Mexican revolution, based on his experiences in the field. It was first published as a serial in the newspaper "El Paso del Norte" from October 1915 to December 1915. The book did not receive general recognition until 1924, and it was hailed as a novel of the Revolution.
Los de abajo (
The Underdogs) depicts the futility of the Revolution, the opportunists in power, and the underprivileged majority of his country. He fought for a better Mexico, and he believed the Revolution corrected some injustices, but it has given rise to others equally deplorable. ==The Mexican Revolution's Effect on Mariano Azuela's Writing Career==