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Aztlán and Arcadia: Religion, Ethnicity, and the Creation of Place

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In the
wake of the Mexican-American War, competing narratives of religious conquest
and re-conquest were employed by Anglo American and ethnic Mexican Californians
to make sense of their place in North America. These “invented traditions” had
a profound impact on North American religious and ethnic relations, serving to
bring elements of Catholic history within the Protestant fold of the United
States’ national history as well as playing an integral role in the emergence
of the early Chicano/a movement.



Many Protestant Anglo
Americans understood their settlement in the far Southwest as following in the
footsteps of the colonial project begun by Catholic Spanish missionaries. In
contrast, Californios—Mexican-Americans and Chicana/os—stressed
deep connections to a pre-Columbian past over to their own Spanish heritage.
Thus, as Anglo Americans fashioned themselves as the spiritual heirs to the
Spanish frontier, many ethnic Mexicans came to see themselves as the spiritual
heirs to a southwestern Aztec homeland.

232 pages, Hardcover

First published August 22, 2014

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Profile Image for Roger Green.
327 reviews29 followers
December 23, 2016
This book is an excellent history / historiography of the material-cultural conditions that develop into border thinking and Chicana/o identities in the United States. Sagarena uses loads of textual sources and precise analyses to tack the affective tendencies that blend to produce political notions of Aztlan.
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