Rsa2014 rhetorical borderlandsfinal

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in Tucson’s Discontinued Mexican American Studies Program Rhetorical, Cultural, and Textual Borderlands Amy T. Hamilton University of Northern Michigan [email protected] Kim Hensley Owens University of Rhode Island okhensley@ gmail.com Michael Flores University of Northern Michigan [email protected] Image source: http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2012-09-28- bookban.jpg

Transcript of Rsa2014 rhetorical borderlandsfinal

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in Tucson’s Discontinued Mexican American Studies Program

Rhetorical, Cultural, and Textual Borderlands

Amy T. HamiltonUniversity of Northern [email protected]

Kim Hensley OwensUniversity of Rhode [email protected]

Michael FloresUniversity of Northern [email protected]

Image source: http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2012-09-28-bookban.jpg

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The banned (boxed) books

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Clip of In Lak’ech recitation from Precious Knowledge

http://www.preciousknowledgefilm.com/

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In Lak’ech as recited in MAS classes

Tú eres mi otro yo/You are my other me. Si te hago daño a ti/ If I do harm to you, Me hago daño a mi/ I do harm to myself. Si te amo y respeto / If I love and respect you, Me amo y respeto yo / I love and respect myself.

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Former MAS teacher Alexandro Escamillo on the Chicano clap

“an energetic way to start class.”

“kinda like a sports team.”

“You do stuff like that to get people together.”

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neplanta

Neplanta is “the overlapping space between different perceptions and belief systems,” where one is “aware of … changeability” and categories that “render[] the conventional labelings obsolete” (541).

-Gloria Anzaldúa, This Bridge We Call Home

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Former MAS teacher Maria Federico-Brummer on In Lak’ech

The In Lak’ech, it’s just an excerpt from the poem, and, um, it’s a Mayan philosophy…it’s kind of like our bell work—have the kids, y’know, get ready to go. They do the recite the poem piece […] and then they get to work. […]

For me, I want our students, for their own growth, it’s for them. So it, this space: This is In Lak’ech. […] [T]his is the expectation. So I don’t have anywhere, like, “These are the Rules, and this is how you’re going to behave in here.”

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In Lak’ech in Luís Valdez’s poem, “Pensamiento Serpentino”

“just look at their moral concept/ IN LAK’ECH: Tú Eres Mi Otro Yo” (173)…“Si te amo y te respeto/ a ti, me amo y me respeto yo;/ si te hago daño a ti, me hago daño a mí.” (174) …“IN LAK’ECH: Tú eres mi otro yo (191)

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In Lak’ech (1) in Domingo Martínez Parédez’s Parapsicología Maya

[Q]ue tú eres yo, y yo soy tú. Que si te respeto me respeto yo, y si te hago daño me hago daño yo, a la altura de amaos los unos a los otros.

(19, his italics)

[Such that you are me, and I am you. Such that if I respect you I respect me and if I do harm to you, I harm me, to the height of loving one another (my translation)]

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In Lak’ech (2) in Domingo Martínez Parédez’s Parapsicología Maya

Tú eres yo y yo soy tú, si te respeto me respeto, si te hago mal, me hago mal. Todo lo que haga repercute en mí, sí […] (84)

[You are me and I am you, if I respect you I respect me, if I do something bad to you, I do something bad to myself. All that is done has repercussions on me, yes […] (my translation)]

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In Lak’ech recitation(with some changes marked)

Tú eres mi otro yo/You are my other me. Si te hago daño a ti/ If I do harm to you, Me hago daño a mi/ I do harm to myself. Si te amo y respeto a ti / If I love and respect you, Me amo y respeto yo / I love and respect myself.

-Valdez, qtd in Huerta 10

Blue = words Valdez added to the Martínez Parédez “original” Italics = English translations added to Huerta’s quoteGray = Stanza that appears last in both “original” and in “PS”Strikethrough = words that appear in PS but not Huerta’s quote

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In Lak’ech: You are my other me

Image source: http://tucsoncitizen.com/morgue/files/2008/06/l1213297792.jpg

In