HOW DO YOU SAY "HONEY" IN MEXAMERICA?
Myths, Misdeeds, and Misunderstandings: The Roots of Conflict
in U.S.- Mexican Relations. Edited by Jaime E. Rodriguez
and Kathyrn Vincent. Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources Inc., 1997.
iii + 278 pp. Maps, notes, bibliography, and index. $45.00.
Common Border, Uncommon Paths: Race, Culture, and National
Identity in U.S.-Mexican Relations. Edited by Jaime E. Rodriguez
and Kathyrn Vincent. Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources Inc., 1997.
x + 188 pp. Maps, notes, bibliography, and index. $45.00.
The war with Mexico hardly ended with the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalago 150 years ago when Mexico lost approximately half of its territory
to the United States. Since then historians, journalists, intellectuals,
politicians, and pundits on both sides of the international border have
sought to portray the other side as the villain in the creation and perpetuation
of racial myths, political misdeeds, and cultural misunderstandings. The
historiographical hostilities between Mexico and the United States show
some signs of abatement as scholars move beyond the nationalist formulations
of the past that view United States–Mexican relations in bi-polar terms:
Anglo Protestant versus Mexican Catholic; Mexican mestizaje (race-mixing)
versus United States racial hierarchies; and Anglo aggression versus Mexican
weakness. While these and other dyads have characterized the various polarities
of United States–Mexican relations, more recent scholarship on "the borderlands"
and "MexAmerica" recognizes the emergence of a cultural, political, and
ethnoracially mixed domain that transcends bi-national analyses. Increasingly
scholars have adopted transnational and transcultural models that recognize
the emergence of cultures "betwixt and between" Mexico and the United
States. These scholars focus on phenomenona not bounded by borders: cholismo
and youth culture in Los Angeles, the Mexicanization of Americanization
in Mexico and the United States, and the evolution of MexAmerica from
a sedentary to a migratory culture, to name but a few. But all of the
essays deal with the stubborn issues of race, nationalism, and culture
as they are inflected by modernist and postmodern sensibilities.
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