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The 2002 Annual Public Symposium

Continental
Crossroads:
Remapping U.S. - Mexico Borderlands History
Held
September 21, 2002 on the campus of Southern
Methodist University in Dallas, Texas
The
U.S.-Mexico borderlands have
long supported a web of
relationships that transcend the
U.S. and Mexican nations. Yet
national histories usually
overlook these complex
connections. Continental
Crossroads rediscovers this
forgotten terrain, laying the
foundations for a new
borderlands history at the
crossroads of Chicano/a, Latin
American, and U.S. history.
Drawing on the historiographies
and archives of both the U.S.
and Mexico, the authors
chronicle the transnational
processes that bound both
nations together between the
early nineteenth century and the
1940s, the formative era of
borderlands history.
A
new generation of borderlands
historians examines a wide range
of topics in frontier and
post-frontier contexts. The
contributors explore how ethnic,
racial, and gender relations
shifted as a former frontier
became the borderlands. They
look at the rise of new imagined
communities and border literary
traditions through the eyes of
Mexicans, Anglo-Americans, and
Indians, and recover
transnational border narratives
and experiences of African
Americans, Chinese, and
Europeans. They also show how
surveillance and resistance in
the borderlands inflected the
“body politics” of gender, race,
and nation. Native heroine
Bárbara Gandiaga, Mexican
traveler Ignacio Martínez, Kiowa
warrior Sloping Hair, African
American colonist William H.
Ellis, Chinese merchant Lee
Sing, and a diverse cast of
politicos and subalterns,
gendarmes and patrolmen, and
insurrectos and exiles
add transnational drama to the
formerly divided worlds of
Mexican and U.S. history.
The papers have been compiled
into a book,
Continental Crossroads:
Remapping U.S.-Mexico
Borderlands History,
edited by Samuel Truett and
Elliott Young, published by Duke
University Press in 2004.
Contributors include: Grace Peña
Delgado, Karl Jacoby, Benjamin
Johnson, Louise Pubols, Raúl
Ramos, Andrés Reséndez, Bárbara
O. Reyes, Alexandra Minna Stern,
Samuel Truett, and Elliott
Young.
Organized and edited by:
Samuel Truett,
University of New Mexico
Elliott Young,
University of
Arkansas
Sponsored
by
The William P. Clements Center for
Southwest Studies at Southern Methodist University

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