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mestizo

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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1963) 43 (2): 305–306.
Published: 01 May 1963
... groups (with weak Indian cultural matrices). The mestizo peasantry of “Aritama” (a pseudonym for a small town on the foothills of Colombia’s Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta) is depicted by the distinguished anthropologists who wrote this book as a passive, food-craving, disease-fearing, and mutually...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1955) 35 (2): 282–283.
Published: 01 May 1955
...Clifton B. Kroeber La seducción de la barbarie, análisis herético de un continente mestizo . By Kusch Rodolfo . Prologue by Solero F. J. . Buenos Aires , 1953 . Editorial Raigal . Pp. 105 . $12 m/arg . Copyright 1955 by Duke University Press 1955 ...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2008) 88 (4): 709–710.
Published: 01 November 2008
...Celeste González de Bustamante For 70 years Mexican school children had been taught that the mestizo, a unique melding of the Indian and the Spaniard, made their country strong. Former president Salinas departed from that message by acknowledging the country’s multiculturalism, and on September...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2014) 94 (3): 508–510.
Published: 01 August 2014
... dominated Mexican anthropology and ethnohistory. Castellanos and Garro put their finger into the ulcer of the twentieth-century mestizo state. From different and sharp perspectives, they pointed out the very contentious relationship among mestizos, the Indian (represented as loud or submissive...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2015) 95 (3): 521–523.
Published: 01 August 2015
...Andrew B. Fisher The Disappearing Mestizo: Configuring Difference in the Colonial New Kingdom of Granada . By Rappaport Joanne . Durham, NC : Duke University Press , 2014 . Map. Figures. Appendix. Notes. Glossary. Bibliography. Index. xiv, 352 pp. Paper , $25.95 . Copyright ©...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1939) 19 (2): 161–184.
Published: 01 May 1939
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1952) 32 (3): 429–430.
Published: 01 August 1952
...Mary Watters Copyright 1952 by Duke University Press 1952 Reyes Vargas, paladín del procerato mestizo . By Rosales Rafael M. . ( San Cristóbal : Imprenta del Táchira , 1950 . Pp. 106 .) ...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1970) 50 (2): 352–353.
Published: 01 May 1970
... by Duke University Press 1970 History of Iberoamerican Folklore. Mestizo Cultures . By de Carvalho-Neto Paulo . Oosterhout N.B. , 1969 . Anthropological Publications . Notes. Bibliographies. Indices . Pp. 262 . Guilders 20.00 (Dutch). (Distributed in the United States by Humanities...
Image
Published: 01 May 2020
Figure 7. Market day with people dressed in indigenous and mestizo attire, Jamiltepec, 1957. Photograph by Susan Drucker. More
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2011) 91 (4): 708–709.
Published: 01 November 2011
...Emily Berquist Indians and Mestizos in the “Lettered City”: Reshaping Justice, Social Hierarchy, and Political Culture in Colonial Peru . By Dueñas Alcira . Boulder : University Press of Colorado , 2010 . Illustrations. Map. Notes. Bibliography. Index . xii , 269 pp. Cloth...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2012) 92 (4): 748–750.
Published: 01 November 2012
...Andrew B. Fisher El peso de la sangre: Limpios, mestizos y nobles en el mundo hispánico . Edited by Böttcher Nikolaus , Hausberger Bernd , and Torres Max S. Hering . Mexico City : El Colegio de México , 2011 . Tables. Notes. Bibliography. 320 pp. Paper . Copyright 2012...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2001) 81 (2): 410–412.
Published: 01 May 2001
... because they are deemed insolent, slovenly and sexually dangerous in contrast to the dignified damas of the “good” Mestizo elite. However, the market women see themselves as indigenous mestizas and their grassroots intellectual work is to contest their relative rank; they challenge dominant constructs...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1984) 64 (3): 564–565.
Published: 01 August 1984
...Carmen Castañeda La educación de los marginados durante la época colonial: Escuelas y colegios para indios y mestizos en la Nueva España . By Canedo Lino Gómez . Mexico City : Editorial Porrúa , 1982 . Notes. Appendixes. Bibliography. Index . Pp. xxiii , 425 . Paper. Copyright...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2018) 98 (3): 377–406.
Published: 01 August 2018
...Adrian Masters Abstract This article explains two unique aspects of the New World Spanish empire: its production of hundreds of thousands of royal decrees, and the unique categories that these edicts contained, such as mestizo and mulato . I outline the petition and response system, through which...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2020) 100 (2): 285–321.
Published: 01 May 2020
...Figure 7. Market day with people dressed in indigenous and mestizo attire, Jamiltepec, 1957. Photograph by Susan Drucker. ...
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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2021) 101 (4): 629–656.
Published: 01 November 2021
... of the government's effort to assimilate Indigenous Bolivians into a mestizo national culture, by reforming Indigenous mothers and eliminating demand for Andean midwives ( parteras ). By the 1970s, a military dictatorship had replaced the revolutionary government, and nursing schools had replaced midwifery programs...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2011) 91 (4): 601–631.
Published: 01 November 2011
... identification of members of ethnoracial categories — indios , mestizos, mulattos, negros , and Spaniards — transformed over time and space in the Atlantic context. I argue in this article that we may be confining ourselves to a conceptual straitjacket if we limit our interpretation of terms like “indio...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2011) 91 (4): 633–663.
Published: 01 November 2011
... in America. In doing so, they reoriented the imagined metrics of purity so as to distinguish themselves from native commoners, mestizos, and the descendants of Africans. However, applying limpieza in native communities could backfire: after two centuries of extensive race mixing, many native lords found...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2017) 97 (1): 29–61.
Published: 01 February 2017
... were readily available, with an upsurge in literacy in Maya among criollo clergymen, merchants, militia officers, and provincial administrators. They in turn observed that almost as many mestizo and Afro-Yucatecan subjects and parishioners spoke only Yucatec Maya as their indigenous counterparts...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2013) 93 (3): 411–449.
Published: 01 August 2013
... that white identification is more common among persons of a brown skin color in Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, and Costa Rica than in the rest of Latin America, where such persons would generally identify as mestizo. This suggests that the whitening ideologies of these four countries have made whiteness a more...
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