Status Updates From Nación Genízara: Ethnogenes...
Nación Genízara: Ethnogenesis, Place, and Identity in New Mexico (Querencias Series) by
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Kristen
is on page 324 of 396
“Genetic genealogy is a tool that has allowed us, the Nuevomexicanos, a scientific pathway to honor our Native heritage by not allowing erasure or suppression any longer.”
— Jan 13, 2023 06:07PM
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Kristen
is on page 283 of 396
“‘Hijo, hijo mío, you are not dependent on the weaver. You are the weaver.’ Maria’s son and Ferrán’s wayward pupil and others like him are exhorted to become the subject in as well as subject to history. In this way, a Genízaro nation is born.”
— Jan 13, 2023 04:50PM
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Kristen
is on page 227 of 396
“Another challenge was a rapidly growing, floating population of Genízaros and mestizos with no ties to specific settlements in the Río Abajo and without title to farmland or grazing land. Having little or no stake in society made it difficult to fully transition and assimilate into Hispano colonial culture.”
— Jan 13, 2023 09:29AM
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Kristen
is on page 168 of 396
“Governor Tomas Velez Cacupin’s 1754 placement of the Genizaros in Abiquiu is understood as his attempt to totally acculturate the Native population as Hispanos. The very fact that some residents of Abiquiu still self identify as Genízaro, and still maintain their Genizaro dances and vocalizations, is a testament to the fact that the colonial process of acculturation was incomplete.”
— Jan 12, 2023 06:50PM
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Kristen
is on page 144 of 396
“Needless to say, the extinction never took place, and the decline or disappearance of segments of New Mexican Native Americans can attributed to identity transformation, acculturation, intermarriage and emigration— which are all components of the process of mestizaje.”
— Jan 11, 2023 08:15PM
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Kristen
is on page 53 of 396
“The cunning maneuvers to retain regional institutions of servitude quickly caught the attention of radical Republicans and abolitionists and, contrary to the wishes of local masters and patroness, had the unforeseen impact of expanding the constitutional abolition of slavery to specifically include debt peons and Indian captives.”
— Jan 05, 2023 09:51PM
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Kristen
is on page 50 of 396
“Between 1700 and 1849, New Mexico’s parishes recorded over three thousand baptisms of captive Indian women and children, many of whom thereafter entered the Hispanic society as Christianized Genízaro subjects.”
— Jan 05, 2023 09:33PM
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Kristen
is on page 34 of 396
“The word “Analco” is of Nahuatl origin, meaning “on the other side of the river,” which is appropriate given the location of the community.”
— Dec 29, 2022 03:53PM
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Kristen
is starting
xxvi “No lloro pero me acuerdo
y reflejo hoy en día,
presenciando las historias
de la gran Genizaría.”
— Dec 05, 2022 08:58PM
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y reflejo hoy en día,
presenciando las historias
de la gran Genizaría.”
Kristen
is starting
xviii “Yet, the most telling aspects of any deep and sustained study of Nuevomexicano Indo-Hispano culture, in fact, reveals how the long story of the people themselves rises from beneath layers of histories formed somewhere in between erasure and memory—histories experienced, imagined, and passed down through story, telling, as it is, identities.”
— Dec 05, 2022 08:43PM
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Kristen
is starting
“As a foundational legacy for New Mexicans, the story of enslaved Indians has been quieted over the years by whispers as much as by silence, hushed aside even by those who have inherited it— carrying if not it’s geography in their faces and hands, then certainly its memory in an aching consciousness.”
— Dec 05, 2022 08:36PM
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Kristen
is starting
Restarting this book though I’ve read chapters here and there, scanned the index, etc.
— Dec 05, 2022 08:32PM
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