Canadian-American borderlands Ostler‚ J. (2004). The plains Sioux and U.S. colonialism from Lewis and Clark to Wounded Knee Felton‚ M. (2009). The Sioux hegira in Canada‚ 1876-1881: The layering and framing of aboriginal identity Greene‚ J. (2000). Lakota and Cheyenne: Indian views of the Great Sioux War‚ 1876-1877 Stevenson‚ D. (2005). The frosts of winter. Victoria BC: Trafford Publishing. La Dow‚ B. (2001). The medicine line: Life and death on a North American Borderland
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Tony Payan exclaimed that‚ “El Paso’s chamber of commerce in the 1920’s‚ found ways to promote tours to Mexico… however they were drinking tours”(Payan‚ Prohibition in the borderland). Dominique Ahedo also wrote in his article about Prohibition Stimulated Economies that “Historian Oscar Martinez explained that the railroads even got into the act by promoting 10-day holidays in El Paso and Juárez”. El Paso was being advertised
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texas.gov * http://epa.gov * City Of El Paso. (2011). Air Quality Program. Retrieved from http://www.elpasotexas.gov/environmenta services * Delgado‚ Jesus . "Smeltertown Still Exists in Memories." Borderlands 21 (2002-2003): 9. Borderlands. EPCC Libraries. <http://dnn.epcc.edu/nwlibrary/borderlands>Page last updated: 01 Oct 2011
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What comes to mind while reading this: broken‚ uneducated‚ hard to understand? In today’s society we are quick to label others‚ all without considering their background or the influences of their culture. However‚ it is our cultures that have shaped us into who we are without us even knowing. Our perception of the world around us has been hindered because of cultural ignorance. Education is one of the dominating factors in our lives. For some‚ it is their education--or lack thereof--that will be
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Chicanos an identity smacked right in the middle of being identified as American and Mexican. Chicanos were once afraid to self-identified as Mexican American because of the treatment of second class citizens Mexican Americans received. Chicanos had history of running toward their white identity by identifying as Americans to receive better treatment. They ran toward whiteness to receive the same rights many other Americans enjoyed. Chicanos used the running toward whiteness strategies‚ because they
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inhabitants. This “collision of worlds” deeply affected all the Atlantic societies—Europe‚ the Americas‚ and Africa—as the effects of disease‚ conquest‚ slavery‚ and intermarriage began to create a truly “new world” in Latin America‚ including the borderlands of Florida‚ New Mexico‚ and California‚ all of which later became part of the United States. chapter summary Millions of years ago‚ the two American continents became geologically separated from the Eastern Hemisphere landmasses where humanity
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During the course of this semester‚ I attended a significant scholars lecture series about Pedagogical experiments in mobilizing Social Justice with/out the Modern Subject. This talk was held by the Social Justice institute with Dr. Vanessa de Oliveria Andreotti who specializes in Canadian Research in Race‚ Inequalities and Global Change‚ Dr Denise Ferreira Da Silva who teachers at the GRSJ institute and Sharon Stein‚ a PhD student in the Educational Studies department. Three spectacular women with
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Cited: Blair‚ John. "Mexico and the Borderlands in Cormac McCarthy’s All the Pretty Horses.” Studies in Contemporary Fiction. 42.3 Spring 2001‚ Literature Resource Center ed.: 301. Print. Lee‚ Susan. "The Search for Utopia: Blood Imagery in McCarthy’s All the Pretty Horses." The Explicator
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The Colonial Mindset in a Changing Age For hundreds of years‚ the colonial mindset has affected the way humans disperse themselves into society. In her article “Queering the Borderlands: The Challenges of Excavating the Invisible and Unheard‚” Emma Pérez defines the colonial mindset as‚ “… a normative language‚ race‚ culture‚ gender‚ class‚ and sexuality. This colonial imagery is a way of thinking about national histories and identities that must be disputed if contradictions are ever to be understood
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Faragher‚ Out of Many: A History of the United States‚ 2/eTable of ContentsPreface 00Community and Diversity 001. A Continent of Villages‚ to 1500 1American Communities: Cahokia: Thirteenth-Century Life on the MississippiSettling the Continent 3 * Who Are the Indian People? 3 * Migration from Asia 3 * Clovis: The First American Technology 5New Ways of Living on the Land 6 * Hunting Traditions 7 * Desert Culture 7 * Forest Efficiency 9The Development of Farming 9 * Mexico 9 * The Resisted
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