Fr. 129.00

Maya Diaspora - Guatemalan Roots, New American Lives

English · Hardback

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Description

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Maya people have lived for thousands of years in the mountains and forests of Guatemala, but they lost control of their land, becoming serfs and refugees, when the Spanish invaded in the sixteenth century. Under the Spanish and the Guatemalan non-Indian elites, they suffered enforced poverty as a resident source of cheap labor for non-Maya projects, particularly agricultural production. Following the CIA-induced coup that toppled Guatemala's elected government in 1954, their misery was exacerbated by government accommodation to United States "interests", which promoted crops for export and reinforced the need for cheap and passive labor.This widespread poverty was endemic throughout northwestern Guatemala, where 80 percent of Maya children were chronically malnourished, and forced wide-scale migration to the Pacific coast. The self-help aid that flowed into the area in the 1960s and 1970s raised hopes for justice and equity that were brutally suppressed by Guatemala's military government. This military reprisal led to a massive diaspora of Maya throughout Canada, the United States, Mexico, and Central America.This collection describes that process and the results. The chapters show the dangers and problems of the migratory/refugee process and the range of creative cultural adaptations that the Maya have developed. It provides the first comparative view of the formation and transformation of this new and expanding transnational population, presented from the standpoint of the migrants themselves as well as from a societal and international perspective. Together, the chapters furnish ethnographically grounded perspectives on the dynamic implications of uprooting and resettlement,social and psychological adjustment, long-term prospects for continued links to a migration history from Guatemala, and the development of a sense of co-ethnicity with other indigenous people of Maya descent. As the Maya struggle to find their place in a more global society,

Summary

Maya people have lived for thousands of years in the mountains and forests of what is now Guatemala, but they lost control of their land and became serfs and refugees when the Spanish conquered them in the sixteenth century. This title provides a comparative view of the formation and transformation of this transnational population.

Product details

Authors James Loucky
Publisher Temple University Press,U.S.
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 20.10.2000
 
EAN 9781566397940
ISBN 978-1-56639-794-0
No. of pages 280
Dimensions 152 mm x 229 mm x 23 mm
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > Regional and national histories

Guatemala, Christi Geburt bis 1500 nach Chr., Amerikanische Geschichte: präkolumbisch, Geschichte allgemein und Weltgeschichte, Bevölkerung und Demographie, Sozial- und Kulturanthropologie, Ethnographie

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