Record Details



Enlarge cover image for From Indians to Chicanos : the dynamics of Mexican-American culture / James Diego Vigil. Book

From Indians to Chicanos : the dynamics of Mexican-American culture / James Diego Vigil.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0881339768
  • ISBN: 9780881339765
  • Physical Description: xviii, 324 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.
  • Edition: 2nd ed.
  • Publisher: Prospect Heights, Ill. : Waveland Press, c1998.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note:
1. Introduction -- Why a dynamic history? -- Macrohistorical evolution and the six C's model of culture change -- Theoretical implications for the present day -- References -- Stage I. Pre-Columbian period 30,000 B.C. to A.D. 1519 -- 1. Human evolution in Mesoamerica -- Ecological adaptation -- Agricultural revolution -- Refinement of sociocultural life -- Olmecs, mother culture -- Chichimecas, migration from Aztlan -- Notes -- 2. Intact and stable social order -- Class : nobility supported by commoners -- Land system -- Social classes and life -- Rise of the state -- Confederacy and trade -- Culture : pantheon of gods, moral order, and literary tradition -- Education -- Religious practices and moral code -- Color : intragroup racism -- Culture as a basis for oppression -- 3. Breakup and transformation of the social order -- Contact : conquerors seek riches -- Background to exploration and discovery -- Cortes begins conquest -- Montezuma and the legend of Quetzalcoatl -- Mexico-Tenochtitlan -- Conflict : destruction of Tenochtitlan -- Causes of Aztec defeat -- Friction over land and religious practices -- Change : colonial practices begin -- Adoption of Christianity -- Religious syncretism -- Initial changes in land, labor, and wealth -- Missionary program -- Beginnings of instability -- References --
Stage II. Spanish colonial era 1521 to 1821 -- 4. Intact and stable social order -- Class : haciendas and debt peons -- Spanish motives -- Encomienda -- Repartimiento -- Hacienda system and debt peonage -- Social role of hacendados -- Life of the debt peons : Mechicanos -- Rationale of the social classes -- Culture : Hispanicization and Mestizaje -- Shift in cultural orientation -- Introduction of Catholicism -- Mestizaje : cultural blending -- Cultural resistance and marginality -- Problems of adaptation -- Political structure -- Education : a double standard -- Native reactions and resultant problems -- Color : roots of racism and racial barriers -- Ethnocentrism and development -- Mestizaje : racial mixture -- Mestizo mentality -- Race and social class -- Effects of racism -- Racism and group conflicts -- 5. Breakup and transformation of the social order -- Contact : enlightment -- Background to the enlightenment -- Revolutionary beginnings -- Enlightenment legacy -- Conflict : independence -- Liberals vs. conservatives -- 1810 : El Grito de Dolores -- 1821 : peace -- Change : experimentation and nationalism -- Age of the caudillo -- Early difficulties -- Conflict over Indian program -- References --
Stage III. Mexican independence and nationalism, 1821 to 1846 -- 6. Intact and stable social order -- Class : ideological struggle between liberals and conservatives -- Mexico under Criollos -- Peasant conditions -- Republicas de Indios -- Haciendas -- Peasant economy and ideological changes -- The role of women -- Events in Northern Mexico -- Economic enterprises in the North -- Breakup of California missions -- Variations of the system in New Mexico -- Rancho life -- Mexican Texas -- Culture : budding Mexicanismo -- First steps toward national unity -- Psychocultural aspects of peasantry -- Decline of cultural imperialism -- Cultural variant in Northern Mexico -- Economic influence on cultural patterns -- Color : Mestizaje and lingering racism -- First challenges to racism -- Problems of redefinition -- Role of Mestizos -- Race and class linkages -- Indians in the North -- 7. Breakup and transformation of the social order -- Contact : Anglo-American expansionism -- Roots of contact -- Expansionist tradition in the United States -- Background to American takeover -- Repercussions of annexation -- Conflict : end of the Mexican-American War, continuation of strife -- Texas as prelude -- Texas annexation and intrigue -- Declaration of war -- Skirmishes and resistance -- Outlaws or "social bandits"? -- Conflict as pattern -- Change : new system for Mexican-Americans -- Treaty of 1848 -- Ethnic rivalry and hostility -- Roots of friction : economic competition -- Variance in treatment of Mexicans -- New dimension to a sense of inferiority -- Basis of new cultural blending -- Cultural accommodation or disintegration -- Growth of economy -- Adaptation strategies -- References --
Stage IV. Anglo-American period 1846 to 1960s -- 8. Intact and stable social order -- Class : industrialism and urbanization -- Background to capitalism, roots of inequality -- Chicano role in the economy -- Effects of the 1910 Revolution on the United States : the push-pull factor -- LIfe in an urban environment -- Internal colonialism -- Depression, repatriation, and post-World War II mobility -- Failure of the political system -- Culture : assimilation vs. nativist acculturation -- The shifts and pulls of middle-class American culture and the ebbs and tides of Mexican immigration -- Contrast between American and Mexican culture -- Strategies and problems of adaptation -- New syncretism : pachucos -- Separatism -- Mexican background : effect of time and place on culture and identity -- Strengths and weaknesses of Mexican culture -- Aspects of cultural imperialism -- Insensitive educational practices -- Color : inter- and intragroup racism -- Ethnocentrism -- Roots of prejudice and discrimination -- "Pigmentocracy" -- Institutional racism -- Public barriers -- Reactions to mistreatment -- Reverse racists -- Roots of intragroup racism -- 9. Breakup and transformation of the social order -- Contact : civil rights ferment -- Shaping the Chicanos -- Effects of modern urban industrial system -- Precursors of change -- Nature of inequality -- Conflict : 1960s Chicano movement -- Movement background -- Groups and actions -- Consciousness-raising -- Step-up in militancy : Aztlan nation -- August 29 moratorium -- Comparisons with other groups and counterreactions -- Factionalism and aftermath of the conflict -- Change : 1970s and beyond -- State of the people -- Chicanozaje -- Chicano arts -- Educational transformations -- Revolution or reform? -- Social class and gender equality -- United States, Mexico, and undocumented immigrants -- Growing Chicano strength -- Chicanos : nativist acculturationists -- References -- Conclusion -- A look to the future : 1990s onward -- The intersection of history and culture change -- Lessons from each stage : continuity and change -- Contemporary stage, growing awareness -- Economic forces and human expansion -- Sociocultural change : the sequence of complexity -- Structural ideology -- Legacies of the past : patterns and problems -- Residue of centuries of history -- References.
Subject:
Mexican Americans > Social conditions.
Indians of North America > Southwest, New > Social conditions.
Indians of North America > Southwest, New > History.
Indians of Mexico > Social conditions.
Indians of Mexico > History.
Mexico > Race relations.
Southwest, New > Race relations.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Northwest Indian College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Lummi Library E 184 .M5 V48 263199 Stacks Reshelving -

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1001 . ‡aVigil, James Diego, ‡d1938-
24510. ‡aFrom Indians to Chicanos : ‡bthe dynamics of Mexican-American culture / ‡cJames Diego Vigil.
250 . ‡a2nd ed.
260 . ‡aProspect Heights, Ill. : ‡bWaveland Press, ‡cc1998.
300 . ‡axviii, 324 p. : ‡bill. ; ‡c23 cm.
504 . ‡aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
5050 . ‡a1. Introduction -- Why a dynamic history? -- Macrohistorical evolution and the six C's model of culture change -- Theoretical implications for the present day -- References -- Stage I. Pre-Columbian period 30,000 B.C. to A.D. 1519 -- 1. Human evolution in Mesoamerica -- Ecological adaptation -- Agricultural revolution -- Refinement of sociocultural life -- Olmecs, mother culture -- Chichimecas, migration from Aztlan -- Notes -- 2. Intact and stable social order -- Class : nobility supported by commoners -- Land system -- Social classes and life -- Rise of the state -- Confederacy and trade -- Culture : pantheon of gods, moral order, and literary tradition -- Education -- Religious practices and moral code -- Color : intragroup racism -- Culture as a basis for oppression -- 3. Breakup and transformation of the social order -- Contact : conquerors seek riches -- Background to exploration and discovery -- Cortes begins conquest -- Montezuma and the legend of Quetzalcoatl -- Mexico-Tenochtitlan -- Conflict : destruction of Tenochtitlan -- Causes of Aztec defeat -- Friction over land and religious practices -- Change : colonial practices begin -- Adoption of Christianity -- Religious syncretism -- Initial changes in land, labor, and wealth -- Missionary program -- Beginnings of instability -- References --
5050 . ‡aStage II. Spanish colonial era 1521 to 1821 -- 4. Intact and stable social order -- Class : haciendas and debt peons -- Spanish motives -- Encomienda -- Repartimiento -- Hacienda system and debt peonage -- Social role of hacendados -- Life of the debt peons : Mechicanos -- Rationale of the social classes -- Culture : Hispanicization and Mestizaje -- Shift in cultural orientation -- Introduction of Catholicism -- Mestizaje : cultural blending -- Cultural resistance and marginality -- Problems of adaptation -- Political structure -- Education : a double standard -- Native reactions and resultant problems -- Color : roots of racism and racial barriers -- Ethnocentrism and development -- Mestizaje : racial mixture -- Mestizo mentality -- Race and social class -- Effects of racism -- Racism and group conflicts -- 5. Breakup and transformation of the social order -- Contact : enlightment -- Background to the enlightenment -- Revolutionary beginnings -- Enlightenment legacy -- Conflict : independence -- Liberals vs. conservatives -- 1810 : El Grito de Dolores -- 1821 : peace -- Change : experimentation and nationalism -- Age of the caudillo -- Early difficulties -- Conflict over Indian program -- References --
5050 . ‡aStage III. Mexican independence and nationalism, 1821 to 1846 -- 6. Intact and stable social order -- Class : ideological struggle between liberals and conservatives -- Mexico under Criollos -- Peasant conditions -- Republicas de Indios -- Haciendas -- Peasant economy and ideological changes -- The role of women -- Events in Northern Mexico -- Economic enterprises in the North -- Breakup of California missions -- Variations of the system in New Mexico -- Rancho life -- Mexican Texas -- Culture : budding Mexicanismo -- First steps toward national unity -- Psychocultural aspects of peasantry -- Decline of cultural imperialism -- Cultural variant in Northern Mexico -- Economic influence on cultural patterns -- Color : Mestizaje and lingering racism -- First challenges to racism -- Problems of redefinition -- Role of Mestizos -- Race and class linkages -- Indians in the North -- 7. Breakup and transformation of the social order -- Contact : Anglo-American expansionism -- Roots of contact -- Expansionist tradition in the United States -- Background to American takeover -- Repercussions of annexation -- Conflict : end of the Mexican-American War, continuation of strife -- Texas as prelude -- Texas annexation and intrigue -- Declaration of war -- Skirmishes and resistance -- Outlaws or "social bandits"? -- Conflict as pattern -- Change : new system for Mexican-Americans -- Treaty of 1848 -- Ethnic rivalry and hostility -- Roots of friction : economic competition -- Variance in treatment of Mexicans -- New dimension to a sense of inferiority -- Basis of new cultural blending -- Cultural accommodation or disintegration -- Growth of economy -- Adaptation strategies -- References --
5050 . ‡aStage IV. Anglo-American period 1846 to 1960s -- 8. Intact and stable social order -- Class : industrialism and urbanization -- Background to capitalism, roots of inequality -- Chicano role in the economy -- Effects of the 1910 Revolution on the United States : the push-pull factor -- LIfe in an urban environment -- Internal colonialism -- Depression, repatriation, and post-World War II mobility -- Failure of the political system -- Culture : assimilation vs. nativist acculturation -- The shifts and pulls of middle-class American culture and the ebbs and tides of Mexican immigration -- Contrast between American and Mexican culture -- Strategies and problems of adaptation -- New syncretism : pachucos -- Separatism -- Mexican background : effect of time and place on culture and identity -- Strengths and weaknesses of Mexican culture -- Aspects of cultural imperialism -- Insensitive educational practices -- Color : inter- and intragroup racism -- Ethnocentrism -- Roots of prejudice and discrimination -- "Pigmentocracy" -- Institutional racism -- Public barriers -- Reactions to mistreatment -- Reverse racists -- Roots of intragroup racism -- 9. Breakup and transformation of the social order -- Contact : civil rights ferment -- Shaping the Chicanos -- Effects of modern urban industrial system -- Precursors of change -- Nature of inequality -- Conflict : 1960s Chicano movement -- Movement background -- Groups and actions -- Consciousness-raising -- Step-up in militancy : Aztlan nation -- August 29 moratorium -- Comparisons with other groups and counterreactions -- Factionalism and aftermath of the conflict -- Change : 1970s and beyond -- State of the people -- Chicanozaje -- Chicano arts -- Educational transformations -- Revolution or reform? -- Social class and gender equality -- United States, Mexico, and undocumented immigrants -- Growing Chicano strength -- Chicanos : nativist acculturationists -- References -- Conclusion -- A look to the future : 1990s onward -- The intersection of history and culture change -- Lessons from each stage : continuity and change -- Contemporary stage, growing awareness -- Economic forces and human expansion -- Sociocultural change : the sequence of complexity -- Structural ideology -- Legacies of the past : patterns and problems -- Residue of centuries of history -- References.
650 0. ‡aMexican Americans ‡xSocial conditions.
650 0. ‡aIndians of North America ‡zSouthwest, New ‡xSocial conditions.
650 0. ‡aIndians of North America ‡zSouthwest, New ‡xHistory.
650 0. ‡aIndians of Mexico ‡xSocial conditions.
650 0. ‡aIndians of Mexico ‡xHistory.
651 0. ‡aMexico ‡xRace relations.
651 0. ‡aSouthwest, New ‡xRace relations.
852 . ‡kE ‡h184 .M5 V48 ‡i1998 ‡p263199 ‡6PB ‡820081006
938 . ‡aBaker and Taylor ‡bBTCP ‡n99192474
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