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Continental Crossroads Remapping Usmexico Borderlands History American Encountersglobal Interactions 1st Edition Samuel Truett

  • SKU: BELL-51887838
Continental Crossroads Remapping Usmexico Borderlands History American Encountersglobal Interactions 1st Edition Samuel Truett
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Continental Crossroads Remapping Usmexico Borderlands History American Encountersglobal Interactions 1st Edition Samuel Truett instant download after payment.

Publisher: Duke University Press Books
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.54 MB
Pages: 406
Author: Samuel Truett, Elliott Young
ISBN: 9780822386322, 0822386321
Language: English
Year: 2004
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Continental Crossroads Remapping Usmexico Borderlands History American Encountersglobal Interactions 1st Edition Samuel Truett by Samuel Truett, Elliott Young 9780822386322, 0822386321 instant download after payment.

Published in Cooperation with the William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies, Southern Methodist University. The U.S.-Mexico borderlands have long supported a web of relationships that transcend the U.S. and Mexican nations. Yet national histories usually overlook these complex connections. Continental Crossroads rediscovers this forgotten terrain, laying the foundations for a new borderlands history at the crossroads of Chicano/a, Latin American, and U.S. history. Drawing on the historiographies and archives of both the U.S. and Mexico, the authors chronicle the transnational processes that bound both nations together between the early nineteenth century and the 1940s, the formative era of borderlands history. A new generation of borderlands historians examines a wide range of topics in frontier and post-frontier contexts. The contributors explore how ethnic, racial, and gender relations shifted as a former frontier became the borderlands. They look at the rise of new imagined communities and border literary traditions through the eyes of Mexicans, Anglo-Americans, and Indians, and recover transnational border narratives and experiences of African Americans, Chinese, and Europeans. They also show how surveillance and resistance in the borderlands inflected the “body politics” of gender, race, and nation. Native heroine Bárbara Gandiaga, Mexican traveler Ignacio Martínez, Kiowa warrior Sloping Hair, African American colonist William H. Ellis, Chinese merchant Lee Sing, and a diverse cast of politicos and subalterns, gendarmes and patrolmen, and insurrectos and exiles add transnational drama to the formerly divided worlds of Mexican and U.S. history. Contributors. Grace Peña Delgado, Karl Jacoby, Benjamin Johnson, Louise Pubols, Raúl Ramos, Andrés Reséndez, Bárbara O. Reyes, Alexandra Minna Stern, Samuel Truett, Elliott Young

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