Our Americas
Political and Cultural Imaginings
An issue of: Radical History Review
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Table Of Contents
Back to Top1. Editors’ Introduction–Sandhya Shukla and Heidi Tinsman
2. Introduction: Histories of Latin Americanisms–Heidi Tinsman
3. Aesthetic Moments of Latin Americanism–Néstor García Canclini
4. Essential Histories, Contingent Outcomes: Latin Americanists in Search of a Discourse–Martín Hopenhayn
5. Latin America: A Story in Three Movements–Rossana Reguillo
6. Personal Stories of Latin Americanism–Arturo Arias
7. Queer Harvests: Homosexuality, the U.S. New Left, and the Venceremos Brigades to Cuba–Ian Lekus
8. Bastards of the Unfinished Revolution: Bolívar’s Ismael and Rizal’s Martí at the Turn of the Twentieth Century–John D. Blanco
9. Whose “America”? The Politics of Rhetoric and Space in the Formation of U.S. Nationalism–Aimee Carrillo Rowe
10. “Wavering on the Horizon of Social Being”: The Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo and the Legacy of Its Racial Character in Ámerico Paredes’s George Washington Gómez–María Josefina Saldaña-Portillo
11. Sacred Subversions? Syncretic Creoles, the Indo-Caribbean, and the “Culture’s In-between”–Aisha Khan
Reflections On The Work Of José Martí
12. The Parallel Worlds of José Martí–Paul Giles
13. The Figuration of Martí: Before and after the Revolution–Salah D. Hassa
14. “Nuestra América”: Territory and Place–Patricio del Real
15. Indigenous Components in the Discourse of “Nuestra América”–Carlos E. Bojórquez Urzaiz
Teaching Radical History
16. Beyond the Nation-State: Teaching the History of the Americas–Enrique C. Ochoa and Ian Christopher Fletcher
17. Teaching “The Americas”–Diana Paton, John Beck, and Gemma Robinson
18. Race and Nation: The United States in “Our America”–Kate Masur
19. The Abusable Past–R. J. Lambrose
20. Notes on Contributors