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(2006) Being Indian in Hueyapan, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Cultural extremists

Judith Friedlander

pp. 157-176

In the 1950s, members of a Nahuatl renaissance movement came to Hueyapan to encourage the villagers to preserve their indigenous heritage. Based in Mexico City, they visited the pueblo as part of their effort to build a following in Indian communities where people still spoke the language of the Aztecs. Supporters of the movement firmly believed that their attempt to revive prehispanic traditions would help the nation become powerful once again, the way it was in the early sixteenth century, in the days before the Spanish conquest. For reasons I hope will become self-evident, I refer to members of this renaissance movement, and of groups similar to it, as "cultural extremists."

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9780230601659_8

Full citation:

Friedlander, J. (2006). Cultural extremists, in Being Indian in Hueyapan, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 157-176.

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