Cartographies of Youth Resistance
About the Author
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Acronyms and Organizations
Introduction • Rethinking Social Movement Temporality and Spatiality through Counterspace and Urban Youth Culture
1 • Building Youth Counterspaces, Horizontal Political Cultures, and Emergent Identities in the Oaxacan Social Movement of 2006
2 • Urban Autonomy, Indigenous Anarchisms, and Other Political Genealogies for the 2006 Generation
3 • Urban Youth Collectives as Laboratories for Constructing and Spatializing Horizontal Politics in Post-2006 Oaxaca
4 • Networking Counterspaces, Constellations of Resistance, and the Politics of Rebel Aesthetics
5 • Rebel Aesthetics: Giving Form to the 2006 Generation’s Liberationist Imagination through Street Art, Punk, and Hip-Hop
Conclusion • Shifting Cartographies of (Youth) Resistance
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Reviews
— Anthropology Book Forum"The book is an ethnographic treasure-trove. Rich in information, it sheds light on the complexity of local politics and social movements. More than anything else, it is the depth of Magaña’s analysis, capturing the youth’s interconnected understanding of race, politics, and subcultures, that makes this book a must-read for researchers of social movements in the Americas, and beyond."
— Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology"In short, Cartographies of Youth Resistance provides a compelling take on the role of Indigenous young people in the spatial construction of social movements. The insights developed in the book are not only useful for understanding social movements in Mexico; they can also be adapted for thinking about youth activism in many contexts throughout Latin America and elsewhere."
— Anthropological Forum“The book’s wealth of ethnographic data on a too-little studied corner of the world opens the door for others to join and extend the valuable dialogues that Magaña and his collaborators in Oaxaca established.”
— Mobilizations"Magaña’s greatest contribution is his ethnographic work about punk culture in Oaxaca. . . . The punk scene is often regarded as the rebel kid of white privilege. Magaña shows us another point of view regarding the deep complexities of this group. . . . This book serves to benefit anyone studying globalization, transculturation, multiculturalism, hybrid cultures, and interculturalism in Latin America."
— CHOICE"Within the context of the enduring afterlife of the renowned 2006 Oaxaca teacher's strike, Magan~a (Univ. of Arizona) presents an extraordinarily well-informed ethnographic account . . .Magan~a portrays and corroborates Oaxacan youth as "agents of change" and "dreamers of liberatory and dignified futures," offering a counter-reality to the prevalent negative stereotypes of the Mexican underclass. This is an excellent book for both its methodology and content."
— Latin American Literary Review“No doubt that Cartographies of Youth Resistance: Hip Hop, Punk, and Urban Autonomy in Mexico is a book that expands our understanding of 2006 Oaxaca and especially of the contemporary social movements there that continue to be led by the youth, echoing the struggles of the 2006 Generation. The book also provides a great contribution to the area of hip hop and punk studies within Latin America, and can be placed as an excellent addition to current scholarship in anthropology of the arts and youth studies.”
— Anthropological Forum"The book’s wealth of ethnographic data on a too-little studied corner of the world opens the door for others to join and extend the valuable dialogues that Magan~a and his collaborators in Oaxaca established."
"Cartographies of Youth Resistance would appeal to readers involved or interested in social movements, as well as young people because of its study of political protests and revolution, and the important role that urban youth had in changing the social climate in Oaxaca city."— Space and Culture
"Magaña’s book is an accessible read for both undergraduate and graduate students. Like the historical agents in his book, students and scholars of radical politics will undoubtedly build on the ideas and analyses contained in Cartographies of Youth Resistance."— New Mexico Historical Review
"This is a beautifully written book that analyzes the life and transformation of one social movement: youth activists in Oaxaca, Mexico, who cohered into a movement after the 2006 civil uprising in that city. Magaña's ethnography shows how this sector created a counter-space of resistance and autonomy in militarized neoliberal Mexico by drawing on a diverse repertoire, including punk and hip hop as well as indigenous customs, and then diminished in the following decade. An important contribution to the literature on social movements, indigeneity, art, urban politics, and neoliberalism."––Nancy Postero, author of The Indigenous State: Race, Politics, and Performance in Plurinational Bolivia
"With deep ethnographic research, keen political analysis, and fine aesthetic sensibilities, Magaña brings into sharp focus one of the most creative youth movements of recent times. Scholars and activists alike will be engaged by his compelling portrayal of the hybrid social movement expressions that have emerged in urban Oaxaca."––Edward J. McCaughan, author of Art and Social Movements: Cultural Politics in Mexico and Aztlán
"An extraordinary ethnographic window into the enduring afterlife of the 2006 Oaxacan social movement. Urban indigenous and migrant youth decolonized political and cultural space from below, with horizontal practices of 'comunalidad' and consensus, and a rebel aesthetics of music, murals, graffiti, and dance. These marginalized youth claimed Oaxaca back from picturesque 'heritage tourism,' enacting an inclusive, indigenous-based citizenship in the process. In Magaña's capable hands, we rightfully see these youths as transformative agents of urban geographies, the political future of a decolonized continent."––María Josefina Saldaña-Portillo, author of Indian Given: Racial Geographies across Mexico and the United States
"Cartographies of Youth Resistance a provides an intense and informed analysis of how youth in Oaxaca utilize performance venues and networks of associations to organize and carry out continuous revolutionary actions that burst through artistic expressions. The seeming quiet resulting from repression is constantly challenged by performative discontent, and we can begin to fully understand how this activism will never cease nor be defeated."––Carlos G. Vélez-Ibáñez, author of Reflections of a Transborder Anthropologist: From Netzahualcóyotl to Aztlán
Awards
- Anthony Leeds Prize in Urban Anthropology 2021 2021, Critical Urban Anthropology Association