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.
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Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lummi Library | E 184 .M5 V48 | 263199 | Stacks | Reshelving | - |
LDR | 08191cam a2200469 a 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
001 | 24112 | ||
003 | NWIC | ||
005 | 20081006155232.0 | ||
008 | 990402s1998 ilua b 001 0 eng | ||
010 | . | ‡a 99192474 | |
035 | . | ‡a(OCoLC)38117046 | |
040 | . | ‡aDLC ‡cDLC ‡dOCL ‡dBAKER ‡dBTCTA ‡dYDXCP ‡dCRH ‡dWANIC | |
020 | . | ‡a0881339768 | |
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050 | 0 | 0. | ‡aE184.M5 ‡bV48 1998 |
082 | 0 | 0. | ‡a979/.0046872073 ‡221 |
049 | . | ‡aMAIN | |
100 | 1 | . | ‡aVigil, James Diego, ‡d1938- |
245 | 1 | 0. | ‡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. | |
505 | 0 | . | ‡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 -- |
505 | 0 | . | ‡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 -- |
505 | 0 | . | ‡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 -- |
505 | 0 | . | ‡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 | |
938 | . | ‡aYBP Library Services ‡bYANK ‡n1433057 | |
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994 | . | ‡a02 ‡bWANIC | |
901 | . | ‡ao38117046 ‡bOCLC ‡c24112 ‡tbiblio |