Forgotten Futures Colonized Pasts Transnational Collaboration in Nineteenth Century Greater Mexico 1st Edition by Cara Anne Kinnally- Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 1684481228, 978-1684481224
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1684481228
ISBN 13: 978-1684481224
Author: Cara Anne Kinnally
Forgotten Futures, Colonized Pasts traces the existence of a now largely forgotten history of inter-American alliance-making, transnational community formation, and intercultural collaboration between Mexican and Anglo American elites. This communion between elites was often based upon Mexican elites’ own acceptance and reestablishment of problematic socioeconomic, cultural, and ethno-racial hierarchies that placed them above other groups—the poor, working class, indigenous, or Afro-Mexicans, for example—within their own larger community of Greater Mexico. Using close readings of literary texts, such as novels, diaries, letters, newspapers, political essays, and travel narratives produced by nineteenth-century writers from Greater Mexico, Forgotten Futures, Colonized Pasts brings to light the forgotten imaginings of how elite Mexicans and Mexican Americans defined themselves and their relationship with Spain, Mexico, the United States, and Anglo America in the nineteenth century. These “lost” discourses—long ago written out of official national narratives and discarded as unrealized or impossible avenues for identity and nation formation—reveal the rifts, fractures, violence, and internal colonizations that are a foundational, but little recognized, part of the history and culture of Greater Mexico.
Table of contents:
Chapter 1. Imperial Republics: Lorenzo de Zavala’s Travels between Civilization and Barbarism
Chapter 2. A Proposed Intercultural and (Neo)colonial Coalition: Justo Sierra O’Reilly’s Yucatecan Borderlands
Chapter 3. A Transnational Romance: María Amparo Ruiz de Burton’s Who Would Have Thought It?
Chapter 4. Between Two Empires: The Black Legend and Off-Whiteness in Eusebio Chacón’s New Mexican Literary Tradition
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Tags: Cara Anne Kinnally, Forgotten Futures Colonized, Transnational Collaboration


