In the face of more than a century of scholarship that has made Oaxaca and its peoples an object of inquiry—in archaeology, anthropology, sociology, and other fields—this wide-ranging study instead demonstrates the many ways that Oaxacans have made themselves the subjects of their own history. Indigenous youth, in particular, drive this interdisciplinary analysis, which relies on local, state, and national archives, as well as interviews with key figures, to highlight the contested nature of state-directed modernization efforts. By closely examining agricultural and educational programs led by state agencies from the 1950s through the 1980s, Dillingham demonstrates the contradictory and complicated nature of indigenismo in Mexico in the decades after World War II. State agencies created to promote official Indigenous uplift in Mexico sought to solve problems that they associated with indigeneity, simultaneously understanding the country’s Indigenous populations as “the origin of national identity, a barrier to be overcome, and a...
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Autumn 2022
September 01 2022
Oaxaca Resurgent: Indigeneity, Development, and Inequality in Twentieth-Century Mexico by A. S. Dillingham
Oaxaca Resurgent: Indigeneity, Development, and Inequality in Twentieth-Century Mexico
. By A. S.
Dillingham
Stanford
, Stanford University Press
, 2021
) 272 pp. $90.00 cloth $30.00 paper
Christy Thornton
Christy Thornton
Johns Hopkins University
Search for other works by this author on:
Christy Thornton
Johns Hopkins University
Online ISSN: 1530-9169
Print ISSN: 0022-1953
© 2022 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Inc.
2022
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology and The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Inc.
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History (2022) 53 (2): 370–372.
Citation
Christy Thornton; Oaxaca Resurgent: Indigeneity, Development, and Inequality in Twentieth-Century Mexico by A. S. Dillingham. The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 2022; 53 (2): 370–372. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/jinh_r_01858
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