Latin American Textualities
History, Materiality, and Digital Media
New Perspectives on Mimbres Archaeology
Three Millennia of Human Occupation in the North American Southwest
Enceladus and the Icy Moons of Saturn
Sentient Lands
Indigeneity, Property, and Political Imagination in Neoliberal Chile
Educating Across Borders
The Case of a Dual Language Program on the U.S.-Mexico Border
Seventeenth-Century Metallurgy on the Spanish Colonial Frontier
Pueblo and Spanish Interactions
Naming the World
Language and Power Among the Northern Arapaho
Rethinking the Aztec Economy
Voices from Bears Ears
Seeking Common Ground on Sacred Land
Instruments of the True Measure
Poems
Here and There
A Fire Survey
The Motions Beneath
Indigenous Migrants on the Urban Frontier of New Spain
Call Him Mac
Ernest W. McFarland, the Arizona Years
The Making of a Mexican American Mayor
Raymond L. Telles of El Paso and the Origins of Latino Political Power
Politician Raymond L. Telles was the first Mexican American mayor of a major U.S. city and the first Mexican American U.S. ambassador. Mario T. García’s updated biography of the ambitious, distinguished, and talented Telles brings the Chicano struggle for political representation to a new generation of readers.
Land, Liberty, and Water
Morelos After Zapata, 1920–1940
Upstream
Trust Lands and Power on the Feather River
Upstream relates the history behind the nation’s largest state-built water and power conveyance system, California’s State Water Project, with a focus on Indigenous perspectives. Author Beth Rose Middleton Manning illustrates how Indigenous history should inform contemporary conservation measures. She uses a multidisciplinary and multitemporal approach and offers a vision of policy reform that will lead to improved Indigenous futures around the U.S.