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2001

6 x 9 in.
317 pp., 17 photos, 4 maps

ISBN: 978-0-292-73149-3
$24.95, paperback
33% website discount: $16.72

 
 
 
     

Histories and Stories from Chiapas
Border Identities in Southern Mexico

By R. Aída Hernández Castillo
Foreword by Renato Rosaldo

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

available through netLibrary

 

"As a multi-layered history of power and identity in Chiapas, this study is without parallel. It offers a richly textured and well-documented history of how the Mam of Chiapas have constructed their own conceptions of identity and citizenship."

—Virginia Garrard-Burnett, author of Protestantism in Guatemala: Living in the New Jerusalem

The 1994 Zapatista uprising of Chiapas' Maya peoples against the Mexican government shattered the state myth that indigenous groups have been successfully assimilated into the nation. In this wide-ranging study of identity formation in Chiapas, Aída Hernández delves into the experience of a Maya group, the Mam, to analyze how Chiapas' indigenous peoples have in fact rejected, accepted, or negotiated the official discourse on "being Mexican" and participating in the construction of a Mexican national identity.

Hernández traces the complex relations between the Mam and the national government from 1934 to the Zapatista rebellion. She investigates the many policies and modernization projects through which the state has attempted to impose a Mexican identity on the Mam and shows how this Maya group has resisted or accommodated these efforts. In particular, she explores how changing religious affiliation, women's and ecological movements, economic globalization, state policies, and the Zapatista movement have all given rise to various ways of "being Mam" and considers what these indigenous identities may mean for the future of the Mexican nation. The Spanish version of this book won the 1997 Fray Bernardino de Sahagún national prize for the best social anthropology research in Mexico.

Born in Ensenada Baja California on the northern Mexican border, R. Aída Hernández Castillo has worked and lived among Guatemalan refugees and Chiapas' indigenous peoples on the southern Mexican border since 1986. She is now a researcher-professor with CIESAS (Center for Advanced Studies in Social Anthropology) in Mexico City.


 Of Related Interest Higgins, Understanding the Chiapas Rebellion: Modernist Visions and the Invisible Indian
Speed, Hernández Castillo, and Stephen, Dissident Women
Walker and Suárez, Every Woman Is a World

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