Tuesday, December 27, 2022

'The Pasts and Futures of Latina o Indige'


Summary and Keywords

The question of indigeneity in the study of Latina/o literature and culture points toward
conflictive histories of colonization and invigorates a set of global directions for the future
of Latina/o studies. The pairing of the two terms—Latina/o and Indigeneity—appears
initially counterintuitive. Conventionally understood as an ancestral relation of Latina/o
communities that has been vanished or lost over the duration of the European colonization
of the Americas, Indigeneity opens a set of insuperable problematics that continue to
pattern and shape multiple and incommensurate iterations of Latina/o politics and culture.
While “Latina/o” in some instances denotes ancestral relation with Native tribes in
the Americas, for many the term has also come to signify decidedly non-indigenous mestiza/
o, settler, or migrant identities, imaginaries, and belongings. The literary, cultural, and
intellectual production of Latina/o Indigeneity offers a unique window into the ways in
which Native politics continue to compete with, accommodate, and challenge multiple
regimes of colonial occupation and periods of modern state formation. Indigeneity illuminates
places of Latina/o literary and cultural production through which to engage the historic
ascendance of a number of fundaments of modern life across the globe, including
capitalism, nation-state sovereignty, and the transnational social structures of race, sex,
citizenship, and gender.

Keywords: Native and Indigenous knowledge, race, mestizaje, detribalization, Indigeneity, resurgence, decolonization
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Problematics of Latina/o Indigeneity

Questions of Latina/o indigeneity and Latina/o relations with Native American and Indigenous
communities across the hemisphere strike at the primal historical scenes of the European
colonization of the Americas. “By 1493, there were 30,000 Tainos living in Borinquen,”
states a January 1971 article in a “History of Boriken” series from Palante, a newspaper
founded by the Puerto Rican revolutionary nationalist Young Lords Party. That year
“the peaceful life of the Indians was disturbed by an intrusion from a fool named christopher
(sic) Columbus while on his second voyage to the Americas . . . This was to be
Spain’s headquarters for its imperialist operations in the so-called ‘new land.’”1 Indeed,
by pulling on threads enmeshed in the primary encounters that invented the Americas,


Read more of 'The Pasts and Futures of Latina o Indige'   here






Los Angeles. THE NOVEMBER EDITION OF CERT OSB FLOORWATCH 2022


Hello folks and I hope all is well on this 26th day of December. 

Here is the NOVEMBER 2022 edition of CERT OSB Floor Watch. See the highlights of this edition below:

-As mentioned, read the feature on our good friend Lorraine Curry

-Read about the Greater Los Angeles Safety & Preparedness Fair…a complete success
-Look for our recap of 2022’s Hollywood Christmas Parade
-Read about our continuing outreach efforts to our neighboring CERT programs
-Read about the Neighborhood Team Program’s arrival in the South Robertson faith community

-Check out reader reaction to last month’s feature in the CERT Supply & Maintenance Shop
-Danielle (Danielle’s Medical Monitor) takes a deeper look at AEDs
-Check out the updated list of CERT Basic Training classes in OSB

-Finally, check out our updated Planning Calendar for events taking place in 2023

Please enjoy. Call out Team, your section starts on Page 26, but the entire newsletter has elements relevant to you, especially the nod to Lorraine Curry as she moves on. 

LAFD Battalion Commanders, please feel free to call us for any services we can render to you and your crews. 

Happy Holidays all. 

--

Chin Thammasaengsri
CERT South Bureau & LAFD CERT Dispatch
lafdcertsouth@gmail.com

FCC Callsign (GMRS) : WQXR 577
"Head 'em up, move 'em on!"


READ NOVEMBER 2022 edition of CERT OSB Floor Watch....here


RECOMMENDED READING LIST

Search This Blog

ARCHIVE List 2011 - Present