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Who’s the Indian in Aztlán? Re-Writing Mestizaje, Indianism, and Chicanismo from the Lacandón

  • Josefina Portillo
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© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vi
  3. Acknowledgments ix
  4. About the Series xi
  5. Reading Subalterns Across Texts, Disciplines, and Theories: From Representation to Recognition 1
  6. I. convergences of times: subaltern studies south asia/latin america, modern/postmodern
  7. Subaltern Studies: Projects for Our Time and Their Convergence 35
  8. The Im/possibility of Politics: Subalternity, Modernity, Hegemony 47
  9. Solidarity as Event, Communism as Personal Practice, and Disencounters in the Politics of Desire 64
  10. A Storm Blowing from Paradise: Negative Globality and Critical Regionalism 81
  11. II. indigenous peoples and the coloniality of power
  12. Rigoberta Menchú After the Nobel: From Militant Narrative to Postmodern Politics 111
  13. No Perfect World: Aboriginal Communities’ Contemporary Resource Rights 129
  14. Historiography on the Ground: The Toledo Circle and Guamán Poma 143
  15. III. subject positions: dominant and subaltern intellectuals?
  16. Slaps and Embraces: A Rhetoric of Particularism 175
  17. Beyond Representation? The Impossibility of the Local (Notes on Subaltern Studies in Light of a Rebellion in Tepoztlán, Morelos) 191
  18. Questions of Strategy as an Abstract Minimum: Subalternity and Us 211
  19. IV. ungovernability: authoritarian and democratic hegemonies
  20. From Glory to Menace II Society: African American Subalternity and the Ungovernability of the Democratic Impulse under Super- Capitalist Orders 227
  21. Twenty Preliminary Propositions for a Critical History of International Statecraft in Haiti 241
  22. Death in the Andes: Ungovernability and the Birth of Tragedy in Peru 260
  23. Outside In and Inside Out: Visualizing Society in Bolivia 288
  24. V. citizenship: resistance, transgression, disobedience
  25. The Teaching Machine for the Wild Citizen 313
  26. Apprenticeship as Citizenship and Governability 341
  27. The Architectural Relationship between Gender, Race, and the Bolivian State 367
  28. Gender, Citizenship, and Social Protest: The New Social Movements in Argentina 383
  29. Who’s the Indian in Aztlán? Re-Writing Mestizaje, Indianism, and Chicanismo from the Lacandón 402
  30. Coloniality of Power and Subalternity 424
  31. Contributors 445
  32. Index 449
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