Description
Book SynopsisFor 120 years, residents of the cross-border community of Laredo/Nuevo Laredo have celebrated George Washington's birthday together, and this account reveals the essential political work of a time-honored civic tradition.
Trade ReviewA much-needed academic analysis of the history and meaning of the binational celebration of George Washington's birthday…Are the cross-border cooperation strategies inspired by Washington's birthday celebrations a solution to immigration restrictions or are they a sophisticated articulation of a longer history of exclusion on the border? This book provokes these and other important questions. * Southwestern Historical Quarterly *
Informative and concise...The book is composed from archival sources in both the United States and Mexico, making it a model of transnational research. Moreover, Peña’s years of field work in Los dos Laredos as an observer in the celebration give the book a street-level view that makes the book engaging. * Pacific Historical Review *
"[Peña] brings an admirable measure of ritual and performance theory to bear on what she calls 'border enactments and 'scaffolding'—symbolic and practical actions—fostered by the [George Washington's Birthday Celebration] and oriented toward Mexico, especially events enacted at the International Bridge." * Journal of American Ethnic History *
[
¡Viva George!] demonstrates that cross-cultural events observed in borderland geographies provide opportunities to define—or redefine—performative expressions of identity, nationalism, and spatial control....
¡Viva George! is suitable for undergraduate and graduate students who wish to explore themes related to borderlands history, performance, race, identity, and foreign relations. The book is well researched with great attention to detail and includes many different examples and creative analysis. * Western Historical Quarterly *
[
¡Viva George!] presents a strong case for an interdisciplinary approach in folkloristics—one that also debunks artificial genre borders as well...
¡Viva George! demonstrates how the study of festivals and celebrations in the field of folklore studies has gone beyond the merely descriptive to serious analysis and theorizing...I would highly recommend the book for use in classes on ritual or popular cultural festivals, especially at the graduate level. * Journal of American Folklore *
Elaine Peña writes a masterful study of the material economy of religion in the borderlands . . .She suggests that border actors engage with place and space in all sorts of ways—refusing to accept lines between nation-states as static or permanent. Play is key here, and it is at once world-building and world-shattering. * Material Religion: The Journal of Objects, Art and Belief *
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: From Border Capricho to Border Scaffolding
- Part 1. Playing for Power
- Chapter 1. Playing Indian, Playing Colonial
- Chapter 2. Playing Mexican
- Part 2. Playing under Duress
- Chapter 3. Hurricane Alice and the International Bridge Closure Crisis
- Chapter 4. Paso Libre
- Chapter 5. Us, Them, and Festive Security
- Conclusion: Why Study Border Enactments?
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index