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Oaxaca Resurgent

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Oaxaca Resurgent examines how Indigenous people in one of Mexico's most rebellious states shaped local and national politics during the twentieth century. Drawing on declassified surveillance docum...
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  • 03 August 2021
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Oaxaca Resurgent examines how Indigenous people in one of Mexico's most rebellious states shaped local and national politics during the twentieth century. Drawing on declassified surveillance documents and original ethnographic research, A. S. Dillingham traces the contested history of indigenous development and the trajectory of the Mexican government's Instituto Nacional Indigenista, the most ambitious agency of its kind in the Americas. This book shows how generations of Indigenous actors, operating from within the Mexican government while also challenging its authority, proved instrumental in democratizing the local teachers' trade union and implementing bilingual education. Focusing on the experiences of anthropologists, government bureaucrats, trade unionists, and activists, Dillingham explores the relationship between indigeneity, rural education and development, and the political radicalism of the Global Sixties.

By centering Indigenous expressions of anticolonialism, Oaxaca Resurgent offers key insights into the entangled histories of Indigenous resurgence movements and the rise of state-sponsored multiculturalism in the Americas. This revelatory book provides crucial context for understanding post-1968 Mexican history and the rise of the 2006 Oaxacan social movement.

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Price: $120.00
Pages: 272
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 03 August 2021
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503614949
Format: Hardcover
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"Thoroughly researched and wonderfully written, Oaxaca Resurgent vividly portrays how bilingual teachers and other indigenista brokers managed to resist, selectively accept, and reshape developmentalist policies and multicultural state projects throughout the 20th century. Based on surveillance documents from Mexican Intelligence Services as well as oral interviews he conducted in Spanish and Mixtec, a language he learned as his intellectual and personal life became increasingly intertwined with the destiny of Oaxaca, Dillingham works with care and empathy, persuasively arguing that Oaxaca's gift for our contemporary world resides in the indomitable energy and plurality of vision of its many indigenous communities."—Cristina Rivera Garza, author of The Restless Dead: Necrowriting and Disappropriation
A. S. Dillingham is a citizen of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and Assistant Professor of History at Arizona State University.
Introduction: The Double Bind of Indigenismo
1. Modernizing the Mixteca: Regional Approaches to Underdevelopment
2. "Was It God or the Devil?": Bilingual Radio Schools and Cold War Catholicism
3. Mixtec Land and Labor: Migration and State-Sponsored Resettlement on the Costa Chica
4. Indigenismo in the Age of Three Worlds: Oaxacan Youth and Mexico's Democratic Opening
5. Bilingual Teachers at the Front: The Rise of Dissident Trade Unionism and the Neoliberal Order
6. Anticolonialism in the Classroom: The Institutionalization of Multiculturalism
Conclusion: The Entangled Histories of Recognition and Resurgence