Honoring relatives by tending graves, building altars, and cooking festive meals has been a major tradition among Latin Americans for centuries. The tribute, "El Día de los Muertos," has enjoyed renewed popularity since the 1970s when Latinx activists and artists in the United States began expanding "Day of the Dead" north of the border with celebrations of performance art, Aztec danza, art exhibits, and other public expressions.
Focusing on the power of public ritual to serve as a communication medium, this revised and updated edition combines a mix of ethnography, historical research, oral history, and critical cultural analysis to explore the manifold and unexpected transformations that occur when the tradition is embraced by the mainstream. A testament to the complex role of media and commercial forces in constructions of ethnic identity, Day of the Dead in the USA provides insight into the power of art and ritual to create community, transmit oppositional messages, and advance educational, political, and economic goals.
Today Chicano-style Day of the Dead events take place in all fifty states. This revised edition provides new information
got into the preface and thought hmmmmm smells awfully white. maybe it...won't be that bad. extremely redundant, sources seemed sporadic at best, and any interesting details were direct quotes from those sources. got several chapters in and thought it was telling there hadn't been any commentary on cultural appropriation, then i reached this steaming hot take:
"Second, 'authentic' ethnic traditions are commonly thought to exist apart from consumer culture, until 'outsiders' begin to appropriate and commoditize them. Such a position ignores the ways in which cultural traditions and commerce often sustain each other, and overlooks the constructive uses that commoditized events and products may have for ethnic minorities."
followed closely by:
"Moreover, the commoditization of cultural traditions is not something that is done exclusively by 'outsiders.'"
no thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
edit- forgot this gem:
"There was one dedicated to labor organizer César Chávez, several altars dedicated to U.S. military servicemembers killed in Afghanistan and Iraq, an altar in memory of the genocide of Native Americans, and one dedicated to the memory of people killed in gay-bashing incidents."
cannot believe that phrasing made it through to publication. ignorant. lazy. dismissive.