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5 - Transnationalism in California and Mexico at the end of empire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2009

Thomas M. Wilson
Affiliation:
Queen's University Belfast
Hastings Donnan
Affiliation:
Queen's University Belfast
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Summary

Do not ask who I am and do not ask me to remain the same: leave it to our bureaucrats and our police to see that our papers are in order. At least spare us their morality when we write.

(Foucault 1972: 17)

The geopolitical wound called ‘the border’ cannot stop the cultural undercurrents. The ‘artistic border’ is artificial. It shouldn't be there, and it is up to us to erase it. (Gómez Peña 1986: 24)

This chapter has been stimulated by my ethnographic work on the US–Mexico border. My immediate problem in relation to this work is how to represent the social and cultural forms of an indigenous people – namely Mixtecs – who migrate in large and increasing numbers into this border area from their homeland in the state of Oaxaca in southern Mexico. This task of ethnographic representation is made complex not only by the spatial extension of the Mixtec community into the Border Area, but by the ambiguous nature of the Border Area itself, which has become a region where the culture, society and state of the United States encounter the Third World in a zone of contested space, capital and meanings. Furthermore, the problem of ethnographic representation of this community in this border region is made yet more problematic by a corresponding decomposition of what now, in the late twentieth century, can be seen as the ‘classic’ epistemological relationship between the anthropological Self and the ethnographic Other.

Type
Chapter
Information
Border Identities
Nation and State at International Frontiers
, pp. 117 - 141
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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