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La Fiesta de los Tastoanes: Critical Encounters in Mexican Festival Performance

Olga Nájera-Ramírez


Each year, for three days in September, the citizens of Jocot�n, an ancient indigenous community near Guadalajara, Mexico, symbolically reenact the Spanish conquest of Mexico in mock battles between Santiago, the patron saint of Spain, and the Tastoanes, the leaders of the indigenous resistance. Paradoxically, the Jocote�os honor Santiago, their special protector, and incorporate both Christian and indigenous practices and beliefs in their fiesta. Employing the concept of hegemony, the author explores what the festival means culturally to the community and shows how it enables Jocote�os to adapt to Christianity and to resist the social order it symbolizes. Through the festival, Jocote�os address their collective identity, the preservation of their folk culture, and their relationship to the social-political power structure of Jocot�n. Students of Mexican culture and of syncretic religions worldwide will find this study stimulating and informative.



"Students of Mexican culture and syncretic religions worldwide will find this study stimulating and informative." --Cultural Survival Quarterly

6 x 9 195 pages 14 halftones, 3 maps

$30.00 ( paperback )  978-0-8263-1998-2 Low stock, call for availability

 

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