This article surveys the development of a relatively new and vibrant subfield in Latin American History, mapping out the major stages of its evolution and signaling key intellectual debates. While much of the scholarship on Afro-Mexican history has been produced in the last thirty-five years, this article aims to contextualize these writings within a broader historical framework. This process shows more clearly the various independent and interdependent tracks that exist within the study of Mexico’s black population. Until very recently, the study of Mexico’s black population could not be categorized as forming any particular school of thought or intellectual inquiry. The impressionistic nature of the writings on blacks, which persisted eve...
An analysis of novel forms of researching Afro-Central American history during the 19th and 20th cen...
Up until the early 19th century, blacks outnumbered white Spaniards in most major Mexican cities (Va...
In Mexico, blackness is rendered invisible due to the absence of Afrodescendants from nationalist di...
This article surveys the development of a relatively new and vibrant subfield in Latin American His...
For many years the studies on black populations in Mexico focused mainly on historic themes. During ...
In 2015, the Mexican state counted how many of its citizens identified as Afro-Mexican for the first...
Recognizing the dire need for foundational texts in the burgeoning field of Afro-Mexican Studies, th...
This article discusses a little known branch of the African Diaspora: Afro-Mexicans, who make up the...
"In Black and Brown" examines how blackness and Africanness became constituent elements of Mexican c...
Although there has been very little research on black Mexican populations, recent years have seen an...
This dissertation explores the lives of Afro-Mexicans who lived in the Port-City of Veracruz and its...
The thesis contributed to the growing body of knowledge and discourse on the African presence in Mex...
This article examines how “La bamba” entered into the cultural politics of Mexican nationalism, the ...
The broader purpose of this paper is to contribute to an awareness of the cultural and social role o...
This dissertation studies the socio-cultural connections of the United States and Mexico’s Pan-Afric...
An analysis of novel forms of researching Afro-Central American history during the 19th and 20th cen...
Up until the early 19th century, blacks outnumbered white Spaniards in most major Mexican cities (Va...
In Mexico, blackness is rendered invisible due to the absence of Afrodescendants from nationalist di...
This article surveys the development of a relatively new and vibrant subfield in Latin American His...
For many years the studies on black populations in Mexico focused mainly on historic themes. During ...
In 2015, the Mexican state counted how many of its citizens identified as Afro-Mexican for the first...
Recognizing the dire need for foundational texts in the burgeoning field of Afro-Mexican Studies, th...
This article discusses a little known branch of the African Diaspora: Afro-Mexicans, who make up the...
"In Black and Brown" examines how blackness and Africanness became constituent elements of Mexican c...
Although there has been very little research on black Mexican populations, recent years have seen an...
This dissertation explores the lives of Afro-Mexicans who lived in the Port-City of Veracruz and its...
The thesis contributed to the growing body of knowledge and discourse on the African presence in Mex...
This article examines how “La bamba” entered into the cultural politics of Mexican nationalism, the ...
The broader purpose of this paper is to contribute to an awareness of the cultural and social role o...
This dissertation studies the socio-cultural connections of the United States and Mexico’s Pan-Afric...
An analysis of novel forms of researching Afro-Central American history during the 19th and 20th cen...
Up until the early 19th century, blacks outnumbered white Spaniards in most major Mexican cities (Va...
In Mexico, blackness is rendered invisible due to the absence of Afrodescendants from nationalist di...