Coloniality of the US/Mexico Border
264 pages, 6 x 9
16 b&w illustrations, 3 maps
Paperback
Release Date:02 Jul 2019
ISBN:9780816540396
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Coloniality of the US/Mexico Border

Power, Violence, and the Decolonial Imperative

The University of Arizona Press
National borders are often taken for granted as normal and necessary for a peaceful and orderly global civil society. Roberto D. Hernández here advances a provocative argument that borders—and border violence—are geospatial manifestations of long histories of racialized and gendered colonial violence.

In Coloniality of the U-S///Mexico Border, Hernández offers an exemplary case and lens for understanding what he terms the “epistemic and cartographic prison of modernity/coloniality.” He adopts “coloniality of power” as a central analytical category and framework to consider multiple forms of real and symbolic violence (territorial, corporeal, cultural, and epistemic) and analyzes the varied responses by diverse actors, including local residents, government officials, and cultural producers.

Based on more than twenty years of border activism in San Diego–Tijuana and El Paso–Ciudad Juárez, this book is an interdisciplinary examination that considers the 1984 McDonald’s massacre, Minutemen vigilantism, border urbanism, the ongoing murder of women in Ciudad Juárez, and anti-border music.

Hernández’s approach is at once historical, ethnographic, and theoretically driven, yet it is grounded in analyses and debates that cut across political theory, border studies, and cultural studies. The volume concludes with a theoretical discussion of the future of violence at—and because of—­national territorial borders, offering a call for epistemic and cartographic disobedience.

 
Roberto D. Hernández is an associate professor in the Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies at San Diego State University, where he teaches comparative border studies and decolonial theory. He co-edited Decolonizing the Westernized University: Interventions in Philosophy of Education from Within and Without.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Coloniality of Power, Violence, and the U-S///Mexico Border
1. At Home in the Nation: On the Structural Embeddedness of Vigilantism and Colonial Racism
2. Territorial Violence and the Structural Location of Border(ed) Communities
3. The 1984 McDonald’s Massacre and the Politics of Monuments, Memory, and Militarization
4. Las Mujeres Asesinadas de Ciudad Juárez and the Double Bind of Their Representation/ability
5. “The Borders Crossed Us”: Anti-Mexican Racism as Anti-Indianism
Conclusion: Coloniality and the Decolonial Imperative
Notes
Discography and Filmography
Bibliography
Index
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