This dissertation explores questions of embodied knowledge, power and consciousness through the study and practice of Anahuacan ceremonial dance. Danza – also known as Danza Azteca, Danza Mexica, Danza Tolteca-Chichimeca, or Mitotiliztli, Macehualiztli and Chitontequiza – is a rich tradition of Indigenous and syncretic dance rooted in transnational movements across Mexico, Central America and the United States. Reflections are offered on the nature of danza as a human movement system and as a social, cultural, political and spiritual movement. Centered in critical and comparative Ethnic Studies, theories of decoloniality, and “theory in the flesh” (Moraga and Anzaldúa 1983) this work thinks from and about danza as an embodied modality of An...
My dissertation project examines past and current understandings of the Jarabe Tapatío, which has co...
Based on field research among Afro-Mexican people of the Costa Chica, Oaxaca, located on the South P...
This thesis demonstrates the active role of dance in Mexico and beyond its borders. The first chapte...
This dissertation explores questions of embodied knowledge, power and consciousness through the stud...
This dissertation explores ceremonial and performative aspects of the dance tradition danza azteca i...
This research imposes a point of view that contradicts a history of conquest and the eradication of ...
Drawing upon seven years of extensive ethnographic research in multiple regions in the U.S. Southwes...
Dissertation The Movement of Mexicanidad in Central Mexico focuses on the movement of Mexicanidad an...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 242-246)This body of work explores present-day manifestat...
This dissertation is an ethnographic study which examined the ritual performances of an interconnect...
This piece considers how music contributes to identities within Aztec dance communities. It explores...
Across Los Angeles, Mexican-American men, women, and children of all ages perform Danza, a communal ...
This work explores the identity politics of performance through the example of an Aztec dancer in th...
Toltec and Aztec Revitalizations are social and religious groups that practice Toltec and Aztec phil...
The Hispanic community is underrepresented at Fort Lewis College and in the city of Durango, Colorad...
My dissertation project examines past and current understandings of the Jarabe Tapatío, which has co...
Based on field research among Afro-Mexican people of the Costa Chica, Oaxaca, located on the South P...
This thesis demonstrates the active role of dance in Mexico and beyond its borders. The first chapte...
This dissertation explores questions of embodied knowledge, power and consciousness through the stud...
This dissertation explores ceremonial and performative aspects of the dance tradition danza azteca i...
This research imposes a point of view that contradicts a history of conquest and the eradication of ...
Drawing upon seven years of extensive ethnographic research in multiple regions in the U.S. Southwes...
Dissertation The Movement of Mexicanidad in Central Mexico focuses on the movement of Mexicanidad an...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 242-246)This body of work explores present-day manifestat...
This dissertation is an ethnographic study which examined the ritual performances of an interconnect...
This piece considers how music contributes to identities within Aztec dance communities. It explores...
Across Los Angeles, Mexican-American men, women, and children of all ages perform Danza, a communal ...
This work explores the identity politics of performance through the example of an Aztec dancer in th...
Toltec and Aztec Revitalizations are social and religious groups that practice Toltec and Aztec phil...
The Hispanic community is underrepresented at Fort Lewis College and in the city of Durango, Colorad...
My dissertation project examines past and current understandings of the Jarabe Tapatío, which has co...
Based on field research among Afro-Mexican people of the Costa Chica, Oaxaca, located on the South P...
This thesis demonstrates the active role of dance in Mexico and beyond its borders. The first chapte...