Sale!

Dancing with the Devil: Society and Cultural Poetics in Mexican-American South Texas (New Directions in Anthropological Writing)

Amazon.com Price:  $13.50 (as of 20/04/2019 09:31 PST- Details)

Description

Combining shrewd applications of  current cultural theory  with compelling autobiography and stylish prose, José E. Limón  works at the intersection of anthropology, folklore, pop culture, history, and literary criticism.  A native of South Texas,  he renders a historical and ethnographic account of  its wealthy Mexican-American folk culture.  This folk culture, he shows—whether expressed through male joking rituals, ballroom polka dances, folk healing, or eating and drinking traditions—metaphorically dances with the devil, both resisting  and accommodating  the dominant culture of Texas.
    Critiquing the work of his precursors— John Gregory Bourke, J. Frank Dobie, Jovita Gonzalez, and Americo Paredes—Limón deftly demonstrates that their accounts of Mexican-Americans in South Texas contain race, class, and gender contradictions, found out so much clearly of their accounts of the folkloric figure of the devil.  Limón’s own field-primarily based ethnography follows, and again the devil appears as a recurrent motif,  signaling the ideological contradictions of folks practices in a South Texas at the verge of postmodernity.
 


Home » Shop » Books » Subjects » Arts and Photography » History and Criticism » History » Americas » United States » State and Local » Dancing with the Devil: Society and Cultural Poetics in Mexican-American South Texas (New Directions in Anthropological Writing)

Recent Products