Part I: Migration to Mexico in an Age of Global Immigrations: 1. From conquest to colonization: the making of Mexican colonization policy after independence; 2. Postwar expulsions and early repatriation policy; Part II: 3. Postwar repatriation and settling the frontiers of New Mexico; 4. Repatriations along the new international boundary: the cases of Texas and California; Part III: 5. The 1871 riot of La Mesilla, New Mexico; 6. Colonizing La Ascensión, Chihuahua: the prehistory of revolt; 7. Anatomy of 1892 revolt of La Ascensión, or the public lynching of Rafael Ancheta; Conclusion: 8. Repatriating modernity?
This study examines various cases of return migration from the United States to Mexico throughout the nineteenth century.
José Angel Hernández is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He has published articles in Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies and Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos, as well as Landscapes of Violence: An Interdisciplinary Journal Devoted to the Study of Violence, Conflict, and Trauma. He has received fellowships from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Trustee Fellowship, the Fulbright–Hayes Dissertation Fellowship and the Center for Mexican American Studies Fellowship from the University of Houston. At Massachusetts, Professor Hernández has received a Lilly Teaching Fellowship and has also been a Center for Public Policy and Administration Workshop Fellow. He was Center for Latin American, Caribbean and Latina/o Studies Faculty Fellow for the academic year 2011.
'Mexican American Colonization during the Nineteenth Century makes
a significant contribution to borderlands, Chicano, and Mexican
history especially because José Angel Hernández takes a distinctly
transnational approach in examining 'Mexican American' migration
'south' to northern Mexico, rather than 'Mexican' migration 'north'
to the southwestern United States. While bridging the gap between
traditional area studies focused on the United States or Latin
America, Hernández's methodology empirically tests the supposed
motivations attributed to 'Mexican repatriates' against the
documentary record, concluding with a more subtle interpretation.
Equally impressive is his thoroughly bi-national and bilingual use
of both primary and secondary sources. In the final analysis …
Hernández, in revealing the surprising impact of ethnic Mexican
repatriates on their nineteenth-century 'homeland' south of the
1848 border, develops a brilliantly original approach worthy of
imitation.' John Chavez, Southern Methodist University
'José Angel Hernández has written an important book about the
little-known history of the repatriation of Mexicans in the decades
after the U.S.-Mexican War. His work is notable for connecting
specific and well-researched cases spanning the entire border from
Texas to California to the broad themes of migration, the creation
of national spaces, and memory that have been so central in shaping
the region.' Andres Resendez, University of California, Davis
'Hernández's illuminating book transforms our understanding of the
U.S.-Mexico borderlands in the latter half of the nineteenth
century. He explores the extensive repatriation of Mexican
Americans in the colonization of northern Mexico. These policies,
he argues, had more to do with defending settlements against the
threats of Anglo American invasion and Apache raiding than the
often-cited ideological notions of racial 'whitening' or
sentimental nationalism. His revealing bi-national archival work
opens crucial questions that many scholars considered closed.'
Renato Rosaldo, New York University
'With one out of ten Mexicans now living in the United States, José
Hernández's brilliant historical analysis of Mexico's relationship
to its diaspora is a timely and important contribution to knowledge
about [the US's] often misunderstood southern neighbor. More than
any other author, he explains how and why Mexico's northern
frontier became transformed into an entity known simply as 'the
border'.' Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University
'Mexican American Colonization during the Nineteenth Century offers
a compelling transnational story that adds to historians' and other
scholars' understanding of Chicano and borderlands history.'
Sterling Evans, H-Borderlands
'The narrative is both dramatic and engaging. I strongly recommend
this book.' John McKiernan-Gonzalez, Southwestern Historical
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