Description
Book SynopsisAn important addition to extant scholarship on the border U.S Southwest,
Forging Arizona recovers a forgotten case that reminds readers that the borders that divide nations, identities, and even true from false are only as stable as the narratives that define them.
Trade Review“
Forging Arizona tells a gripping story about inheriting and inventing, about fictionalizing and forgetting. Huizar-Hernández deftly mines the unsettling history of the Peralta Land Grant to make an important contribution to our understanding of the Latinx Southwest and its place in US national narratives." -- Kirsten Silva Gruesz * author of Ambassadors of Culture: The Transamerican Origins of Latino Writing *
"In this highly original study, Anita Huizar-Hernández combines the history of western expansion with the concerns of Latino/a/x studies to show how ideologies that forged the US border in the nineteenth century were intertwined with facile notions of ethnic identity. With insightful analysis of fabricated historical documents, Huizar-Hernández questions the uses of archival authority to support logics of inclusion and exclusion." -- Rodrigo Lazo * coeditor of The Latino Nineteenth Century *
"Recommended." * Choice *
"Arguably one of the most important books on Arizona history written in the last decade." * Tombstone Epitaph *
"Borderlands Professor Brings Fresh Light to an Arizona Land Fraud," interview with Anita Huizar-Hernandez * Tombstone Epitaph *
"
Forging Arizona is a highly effective piece of scholarship due in large part to the moral significance of Huizar-Hernández’s work....Dissecting such narratives undoubtedly serves an important role in making larger contemporary political points.
Forging Arizona is thus a timely and highly welcome addition to that conversation." * Southwestern Historical Quarterly *
"
Forging Arizona is a significant contribution to archival studies, Arizona, and borderlands history." * Journal of Arizona History *
"Huizar-Hernández succeeds in her stated intention to explain the relationship between narratives and borders. Borders work well as a thematic hook, as Peralta-Reavis’s racialized and gendered body symbolized the sort of categorical ambiguity that rendered nineteenth-century conquest of the US West incomplete. Huizar-Hernández’s framework of “unsettlement” entails a disruption of the version of US history that naturalizes the Anglo-American dominance over the US West and erases the historical participation and continued presence of peoples of color in the Arizona territory." * H-Net *
"By the monograph’s end, readers are left making enthralling comparisons between Reavis’s ability to create a false archive in the nineteenth century and concerns of 'fake news' in the twenty-first century....Huizar-Hernandez expertly utilizes the case of Reavis to underline not only 'a historical land fraud but also the fault lines of the late nineteenth-century U.S. racial imaginary.'" * Pacific Historical Review *
Table of ContentsContents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I Inventing the Peralta Land Grant
1 Counterfeit Narratives: The Peralta Land Grant Archives and the Forging of the West
2 Searching for Sofia: Race, Gender, and Authenticity at the 1895 Court of Private Land Claims
3 Southwest Speculation: Newspaper Coverage of the Peralta Land Grant
Part II (Re)membering the Peralta Land Grant
4 Counterfeit Nostalgia: William Atherton DuPuy’s
The Baron of the Colorados (1940)
5 The Baron is Like a Battleground: Samuel Fuller’s
The Baron of Arizona (1950)
Epilogue: Forgetting the Peralta Land Grant
Notes
Bibliography
Index