“This impressive chronicle of the lifework of a powerful Indigenous woman wrestling with personal, familial, and cultural survival is also a story of the landscapes of Texas and Arkansas, which emerge as sites of birth, death, safety, and danger. A wonderful book.” —Pippa Holloway, Cornerstone Chair in History, University of Richmond<br /><br />“I have long admired the work of MarÍa Cristina Moroles at Arco Iris, and now <i>Águila</i> celebrates her life and vision. Filled with stories from Moroles’s life deftly assembled by Lauri Umansky, <i>Águila</i> demonstrates how to live honoring visions of peace and justice. Moroles has led a life filled with meaning and purpose; reading <i>Águila</i>, all may witness and emulate. <i>Águila</i> is fantastic!”—Julie R. Enszer, editor and publisher, <i>Sinister Wisdom</i><br /><br />“<i>Águila</i> is beautifully written and powerfully engaging. It moves and touches you while simultaneously deepening and complicating the narrative about life in the Ozark Mountains. And it does this through the lens of a woman of color residing in a women-centered community. One cannot help but be inspired by Águila’s struggle, despair, hope, resilience, and power as she resisted the forces that would otherwise leave her unnamed and unacknowledged as she lives her life as freely and audaciously as possible.”—Cherisse Jones-Branch, dean of the graduate school and professor of history, Arkansas State University
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
MarÍa Cristina Moroles is matriarch of Arco Iris, a healing sanctuary in the Ozark Mountains originally established for women and children of color and the queer community and now open to all people seeking healing. Moroles lives on the five-hundred-acre wilderness preserve in community with her children, Jennifer and Mario; visiting students; and other resident stewards. Also known by the ceremonial name Águila, she incorporates her Indigenous and Mexican American heritage in her work as a curandera, master massage therapist, and shaman. She is co-founder of the Arco Iris Earth Care Project.Lauri Umansky teaches history and directs the Heritage Studies PhD Program at Arkansas State University. Her books include Motherhood Reconceived: Feminism and the Legacies of the Sixties, Naked Is the Best Disguise (pseud. Lauri Lewin), “Bad” Mothers: The Politics of Blame in Twentieth-Century America, Impossible to Hold: Women and Culture in the 1960s, and The New Disability History: American Perspectives.