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Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo

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2022 Americo Paredes Award, Center for Mexican American Studies at South Texas College

Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo were curanderos—faith healers—who, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, worked outside the realm of "professional medicine," seemingly beyond the reach of the church, state, or certified health practitioners whose profession was still in its infancy. Urrea healed Mexicans, Indigenous people, and Anglos in northwestern Mexico and cities throughout the US Southwest, while Jaramillo conducted his healing practice in the South Texas Rio Grande Valley, healing Tejanos, Mexicans, and Indigenous people there. Jennifer Koshatka Seman takes us inside the intimate worlds of both "living saints," demonstrating how their effective healing—curanderismo—made them part of the larger turn-of-the century worlds they lived in as they attracted thousands of followers, validated folk practices, and contributed to a modernizing world along the US-Mexico border. While she healed, Urrea spoke of a Mexico in which one did not have to obey unjust laws or confess one's sins to Catholic priests. Jaramillo restored and fed drought-stricken Tejanos when the state and modern medicine could not meet their needs. Then, in 1890, Urrea was expelled from Mexico. Within a decade, Jaramillo was investigated as a fraud by the American Medical Association and the US Post Office. Borderlands Curanderos argues that it is not only state and professional institutions that build and maintain communities, nations, and national identities but also those less obviously powerful.

232 pages, Hardcover

Published January 19, 2021

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Profile Image for Lindsey.
141 reviews3 followers
March 2, 2021
A really interesting chunk of history and borderland culture that I knew nothing about as well as important reading about some of the extremely upsetting and harmful generalizations/opinions colonizers (white peeps in general) held about indigenous and Mexican people.

....also it's just rad to read a book where El Paso makes repeat appearances!
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