This dissertation examines the political and creative practices of Mujeres de Maiz (MdM/Women of the Corn), an Indigenous mestiz@ led feminist of color visual and performing arts collective based in Los Angeles. Since their inception in 1997, Mujeres de Maiz has used politically and spiritually charged art that aims to challenge social injustices, revise dominant cultural representations and build meaningful communities across differences. The research was drawn from a dual method approach: textual analysis and participant observation ethnography with the MdM collective from 2009 to 2014 to examine how urban Indigenous mestiz@s represent themselves in textual and social spaces. Few studies have paid attention to constructions of Chicano ind...
As second wave feminisms emerged throughout the world, diverse collectives and consciousness-raising...
Drawing on oral histories and participant observation fieldwork with Zapotecs in Los Angeles, Califo...
Indigenous social movements in the Americas have multiple sources, but in regards to Mexican America...
This dissertation examines the political and creative practices of Mujeres de Maiz (MdM/Women of the...
This dissertation addresses issues of gender and indigeneity through an analysis of ceremonial and q...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 108-110)Based on the artist and activist collective Muje...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 98-103)This thesis will explore the ways in which Chican...
The U.S. third world women's movement proposes the Chicana new mestiza identity as a methodology of ...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2016. Major: Feminist Studies. Advisor: Edén Torre...
This dissertation focuses on Mónica Mayer (b. Mexico City, 1954), analyzing her work to understand t...
This dissertation examines a transnational Mexican community that spans Tlaxcala, Mexico, and Connec...
textThis dissertation is an ethnographic analysis of state led multiculturalism and its impacts on i...
Through an interdisciplinary lens, my dissertation examines how painters (Frida Kahlo in the 1920s-5...
This project considers how Chicana playwrights Cherríe Morgana and Josefina Lopez, as well as Mexic...
This study examines how Spanish colonization and the imposition of institutions ranging from governm...
As second wave feminisms emerged throughout the world, diverse collectives and consciousness-raising...
Drawing on oral histories and participant observation fieldwork with Zapotecs in Los Angeles, Califo...
Indigenous social movements in the Americas have multiple sources, but in regards to Mexican America...
This dissertation examines the political and creative practices of Mujeres de Maiz (MdM/Women of the...
This dissertation addresses issues of gender and indigeneity through an analysis of ceremonial and q...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 108-110)Based on the artist and activist collective Muje...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 98-103)This thesis will explore the ways in which Chican...
The U.S. third world women's movement proposes the Chicana new mestiza identity as a methodology of ...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2016. Major: Feminist Studies. Advisor: Edén Torre...
This dissertation focuses on Mónica Mayer (b. Mexico City, 1954), analyzing her work to understand t...
This dissertation examines a transnational Mexican community that spans Tlaxcala, Mexico, and Connec...
textThis dissertation is an ethnographic analysis of state led multiculturalism and its impacts on i...
Through an interdisciplinary lens, my dissertation examines how painters (Frida Kahlo in the 1920s-5...
This project considers how Chicana playwrights Cherríe Morgana and Josefina Lopez, as well as Mexic...
This study examines how Spanish colonization and the imposition of institutions ranging from governm...
As second wave feminisms emerged throughout the world, diverse collectives and consciousness-raising...
Drawing on oral histories and participant observation fieldwork with Zapotecs in Los Angeles, Califo...
Indigenous social movements in the Americas have multiple sources, but in regards to Mexican America...