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1 - Indigenous Herencias

Creoles, Mestizaje, and Nations before Nationalism

from Part I - Rereading the Colonial Archive

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 February 2018

John Morán González
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Austin
Laura Lomas
Affiliation:
Rutgers University, New Jersey
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Summary

Centering the question of how coloniality staged the conceptual clash of peoples and ideas, this chapter locates the first expressions of transculturation in Latin America within the contact zones created by European colonialism and the Indigenous subaltern responses to it that ultimately became a critical element in the forging of contemporary Latina/o identities. The chapter critiques the claim of European colonialism to uniquely narrate the encounter between Europeans and indigenous peoples throughout the Americas, as this attitude underwrites the privileging of colonial ways of knowing and the dismissal of Indigenous ones. It provides a more sedimented genealogy of categories and concepts such as “creoles,” “mestizaje,” “hybridity,” and “nations” that ultimately scarred U.S. Latina/os, to conclude that Latina/o literatures always evidence the phantasmatic presence of indigeneity. We have to locate this problematic in the intersectionalities of race, and further plunge into the instabilities of racial geographies that continue to mark Latinidad.
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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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