Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 168
Trim: 5¾ x 8½
978-0-7425-4228-0 • Paperback • November 2004 • $40.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4617-1421-7 • eBook • November 2004 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
Jacques Audinet is Professor Emeritus in Anthropology at the University of Metz and l'Institut Catholique de Paris. He has taught in the United States, Canada and Latin America and remains involved with the Mexican American Cultural Center in San Antonio, Texas.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Encounters...
Chapter 2 Chapter I: Diversity, Geography, Cultures
Part 3 In the Beginning was Geography
Part 4 Cultural Indicators
Part 5 Culture & Modernity
Chapter 6 Chapter II: From Multicultural to Mestizaje
Part 7 Recognizing Differences
Part 8 Beyond Multiculturalism
Part 9 What about Mestizaje?
Chapter 10 Chapter III: The Vocabulary of Mestizaje
Part 11 The Vocabulary of Marginality
Part 12 The Scale of Colors
Part 13 From Contempt to Recognition
Chapter 14 Chapter IV: Mestizaje Recognized
Part 15 Inescapable Diversity
Part 16 A Desired Totality
Part 17 Between Body and Dream
Chapter 18 Chapter V: A (Hi)Story of Desire and Violence
Part 19 The Flesh of Empires
Part 20 Legendary Figures
Part 21 The Labyrinth of Contradiction
Chapter 22 Chapter VI: Democracy: Rupture and Turning Point
Part 23 Mestizaje Doesn't Exist: Cornelius de Pauw
Part 24 Inegalitarian Mestizaje: Arthur de Gobineau
Part 25 Liberty Protests: Alexis de Tocqueville
Chapter 26 Chapter VII: The Transformation of Bonds
Part 27 Shifting Boundaries
Part 28 Binary or Ternary Dialogue
Part 29 The In-Between Zones
Chapter 30 Chapter VIII: Symbology Shattered
Part 31 Nebulous Images
Part 32 The Body at Stake
Part 33 Reinvention at Work
Chapter 34 Chapter IX: A Memory with a Future
Part 35 Vasconcelos, or Cosmic Utopia
Part 36 A Profound Reversal
Part 37 The Future's Unpredictable Element
Chapter 38 Conclusion: A Paradigm for Humanity
In The Human Face of Globalization, Jacques Audinet writes against the insane dreams of the 20th century—especially all forms of cultural and social segregation founded on violence. He discovers that mestizaje, the interpenetration and mixing of cultures, in its contemporary movements and forms, is both an exorcism and a dynamic model for healthy and creative change. Mestizaje critiques the monovisions and the monologues of the cultural purists and the nativists. In Audinet's vision of our global existence, human expressions of art, gastronomy, mourning, love and the imagination will survive and thrive only through the embrace and cultivation of mestizaje, which will help translate us not into new divisions but into the renewal of cultural life.
— Davíd Carrasco, Neil L. Rudenstine Professor of the Study of Latin America, Harvard University
From Alexander the Great and the Persian princess Roxane to Malinche and the European conquest of the Americas to today's globalized world, Audinet unveils the dangers and creative possibilities of mestizaje. Grounding his analysis in the corporeal and cultural experiences of contemporary life, he deftly illuminates the dynamics of mestizaje and its significance for the future of humanity.
— Timothy Matovina, associate professor of theology and director of the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism, University of Notre Dam
Mestizaje (metissage, cross-breeding) is a cultural and biological fact not only in the Americas but all over the word. In this important book, Audinet argues that taking a stance on mestizaje is taking a stance on a direction for humanity.
— R Stephen Warner, professor of sociology, University of Illinois at Chicago