Resolana
224 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:05 Feb 2009
ISBN:9780816528349
CA$37.95 Back Order
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Resolana

Emerging Chicano Dialogues on Community and Globalization

The University of Arizona Press
Villagers in northern New Mexico refer to the south-facing side of a wall as la resolana, meaning “the place where the sun shines.” Every culture has a resolana, a place where the resolaneros—the villagers—gather, dialogue, and reflect on society, culture, and politics. The buried knowledge that emerges from this process may be “pure gold,” or el oro del barrio, a metaphor for the culturally contextualized knowledge gathered at the resolana.

Coming from diverse backgrounds in social work, sociology, public administration, literature, history, and education, three modern resolaneros take the twin concepts of resolana and el oro del barrio on a breathtaking journey from their rural roots to their application in an urban setting and on to a holistic view of globalization. The authors offer a humane perspective on transborder cultures and all communities struggling to maintain their cultural and linguistic identities. They share an optimistic view of how ordinary people everywhere can take back control of their own destinies. This book is about uncovering subjugated knowledge—el oro del barrio—through resolana, a dynamic process of thought and action.

Resolana will inspire dialogue and creativity from those interested in sociology, political science, social work, and Chicano studies, as well as public-policy makers and the general public.
Miguel Montiel is the Motorola Presidential Professor Emeritus at the North American Center for Transborder Studies at Arizona State University. He is co-author of Debatable Diversity: Critical Dialogues on Change in American Universities. Tomás Atencio is a community activist, co-founder of La Academia de la Nueva Raza (The Academy of the New Humanity), Emeritus Lecturer at the University of New Mexico, and author of Resolana: A Chicano Pathway to Knowledge. E. A. Mares is an essayist, historian, poet, and Emeritus Professor at the University of New Mexico. His most recent books are With the Eyes of a Raptor and his translation of poems by Ángel González, Almost All the Music.
Foreword
Raul Yzaguirre
Preface
Miguel Montiel
Prologue
Introduction: No Siempre Es el León Como Lo Pintan
1. El Oro del Barrio in the Cyber Age: Leapfrogging the Industrial Revolution
Tomás Atencio
2. Resolana in Action: Dialogues on Success and Community
Miguel Montiel
3. A Resolana on Networks: Chicanos, Connections, and Culture
E. A. “Tony” Mares
Epilogue
Notes
Works Cited
Index
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