Undoing Modernity

Undoing Modernity Linguistics, Higher Education, and Indigeneity in Yucatan

First edition

Hardback (07 Jan 2025)

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Publisher's Synopsis

An ethnography of the decolonization of Maya-ness.

On the Yucatán Peninsula today, undergraduates are inventing a new sense of being Maya by studying linguistics and culture in their own language: Maya. In this bold theoretical intervention informed by ethnographic research, Catherine R. Rhodes argues that these students are undoing the category of modernity itself. Created through colonization of the Americas, modernity is the counterpart to coloniality; the students, Rhodes suggests, are creating decoloniality's companion: "demodernity."

Disciplines like linguistics, anthropology, history, and archaeology invented "the Maya" as an essentialized ethnos in a colonial, modern mold. Undoing Modernity follows students and their teachers as they upset the seemingly stable ethnic definition of Maya, with its reliance on a firm dichotomy of Maya and modern. Maya linguistics does not prove that Maya is modern but instead rejects the Maya-ness that modernity built, while also fostering within the university an intellectual space in which students articulate identity on their own terms. An erudite and ultimately hopeful work of interdisciplinary scholarship that brings linguistic anthropology, Mesoamerican studies, and critical Indigenous studies into the conversation, Undoing Modernity dares to imagine the world on the other side of colonial/modern ideals of Indigeneity.

Book information

ISBN: 9781477330579
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Imprint: University of Texas Press
Pub date:
Edition: First edition
DEWEY: 306.4497265
DEWEY edition: 23/eng/20230208
Language: English
Number of pages: cm
Weight: 454g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm