The essays in this volume contain a symphony of carefully orchestrated
narratives that engage a wide-ranging assemblage of topics including
immigration, indigenous identity, Genízaros, hybridity, education,
religious syncretism, and United States and Spanish imperialism.
Utilizing excavated memory, archival history, and employing the work
of performance and postcolonial theorists, the author examines Native
American slavery and captivity in the Spanish Colonial Southwest, with
emphasis on Coyotes (indigenous mixed-bloods) of Pueblo/Spanish
ancestry as well as descendants of Indigenous servants. The essays
engage the cultural politics of education within the context of hybrid
religious practices such as pilgrimages to el Cerro de Tepeyac, the
site of veneration of the pre-Columbian Goddess Tonanztin and her
contemporary, la Señora de Guadalupe; el Santuario de Chimayo, the
pre-Hispanic Tewa religious site that continues to serve as the
destination for pilgrims, albeit now draped in Catholic ritual; and
the Comanche dance ceremony of the Saracino sisters of Atrisco. The
essays emerge in part from the author’s childhood in the Barelas and
Atrisco neighborhoods of Albuquerque, two of several mixed-blood
indigenous communities of New Mexico plagued by a devastating heroin
epidemic in the 1950s and 60s. “Bernardo Gallegos has produced a
stunning achievement. Postcolonial Indigenous Performances: Coyote
Musings on Genízaros, Hybridity, Education, and Slavery is an
emotionally gripping, beautifully written, and intellectually
captivating page turner that theorizes the ‘Genízaro story’ in a
way that brings the genocidal underpinnings of the colonial agenda to
light.” – Angela Valenzuela, College of Education, University of
Texas at Austin “Postcolonial Indigenous Performances: Coyote
Musings on Genízaros, Hybridity, Education, and Slavery is a
brilliant expression of complexities, contours, and nuances of
indigenous lived experience. It is told through theeyes and the being
of Bernardo Gallegos, who lived inside that experience, knowing the
ghosts of its distant past and relationships of its recent present.”
– William H. Schubert, Professor Emeritus of Curriculum and
Instruction and former University Scholar, University of Illinois at
Chicago “This beautifully written book shows how the past horrors of
Native American subjugation and enslavement can haunt the lives of
their descendants. Bernardo Gallegos’ superb research and personal
narrative tells the story of colonial New Mexico and the resulting
psychological damage on future generations. I’m still haunted by the
effect on me of the Choctaw march on the Trail of Tears.” – Joel
Spring, City University of New York
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Coyote Musings on Genízaros, Hybridity, Education, and Slavery
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9789463510387
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter