简介:墨西哥和美国的中美洲土著运动

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY MEXICAN STUDIES-ESTUDIOS MEXICANOS Pub Date : 2023-03-04 DOI:10.1525/msem.2023.39.1.7
L. Stephen, Laura Velasco-Ortiz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

根据DanielèDehouve(2015,28)的说法,移民创造了前哥伦比亚土著人民的根源。然而,由于被迫流离失所和重新安置,这些为寻找新土地而进行的漫长朝圣变成了流亡,目的是在西班牙殖民主义下强行工作,并在独立后通过克里奥洛斯继续进行殖民主义。在这些基础性和强制性的流离失所事件发生几个世纪后,一直到21世纪,土著人的流动性挑战了混血儿/拉迪诺民族主义地图的地理位置。我们看到土著人民流离失所和流动的情况非常多样,这对城市边缘化和农村土著农民的典型概念和方法提出了质疑。除了与劳工有关的大规模流离失所之外,其他人是因为被驱逐或人们逃离暴力,或者是因为年轻一代对他们的生活、未来和可能性的概念发生了转变。与此同时,土著人民的分散和分裂伴随着新的领土、新的共存形式和社区关系。本期特刊汇集了一系列关于墨西哥和美国当代中美洲土著流动性的文章
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Introduction: Mesoamerican Indigenous Mobilities in Mexico and the United States
According to Danielè Dehouve (2015, 28), migrations created the roots of pre-Columbian Indigenous peoples. Nevertheless, those lengthy pilgrimages in search of new lands turned into exoduses due to forced displacement and relocation in order to work forcibly under Spanish colonialism and its continuation through Criollos in independence. Centuries after those foundational and enforced displacements, well into the twenty-first century, Indigenous mobilities challenge the geography of mestizo/Ladino nationalist maps. We are witnessing great diversity in Indigenous peoples’ displacements and mobilities that question the typical concepts and approaches used to characterize urban marginalization and rural Indigenous peasants. In addition to mass labor-related displacements, others are due to expulsion or people fleeing violence, or because of the transformation of how younger generations conceptualize their lives, futures, and possibilities. At the same time, the dispersion and fragmentation of Indigenous peoples are accompanied by new territorialities, and new forms of coexistence and communal relationships. This special issue brings together a set of articles on contemporary Mesoamerican Indigenous mobilities in Mexico and the United
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: The rich cultural production and unique peoples of Mexico--coupled with the country"s complex history, political legacy, social character, economy, and scientific development--lay the foundation for the bilingual Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos, the only U.S. published academic journal of its kind. Journal articles in both English and Spanish are welcomed from a variety of multidisciplinary perspectives and methodologies, comparative analyses notwithstanding. All content published remains focused on the contributions to and knowledge of Mexican studies as a discipline.
期刊最新文献
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