1. LOS GRUPOS YUMANOS DE BAJA CALIFORNIA: ¿INDIOS DE PAZ O INDIOS DE GUERRA? UNA APROXIMACIÓN DESDE LA TEORÍA DE LA RESISTENCIA PASIVA.
- Author
-
GARDUÑO, Everardo
- Subjects
- *
YUMAN (North American people) , *COLONIZATION , *INDIGENOUS peoples of Mexico , *NATIVE Americans - Abstract
For the prestigious Mexican historian, Miguel León-Portilla, the Yumans of Baja California were not Indians of warfare, but rather Indians of peace. In the opinion of this researcher, it was because of their living in a fossilized paleolithic state that these Indigenous groups did not present any kind of resistance against the European colonization, making possible their easy domination and afterwards diminishment or assimilation. This paper questions these assertions not only because of their lack of technical precision, but also because they obscure the role of agency that these Indians played during the missionary period. On the contrary, this paper endorses Edward Spicer (1962) in the sense that resistance took place even among those groups who were not seriously engaged in significant fights against the Spanish conquerors. In the particular case of the Yuman people, this resistance challenged the Pueblo Indio project and its related implications in terms of sedentary lifestyle, agricultural economy and the adoption of a scheme of central authority. As we know, these patterns were opposed to those observed among the Yumans as nomads, hunters and gatherers, organized into a segmentary lineage system. Moreover, the kind of resistance described in this paper constitutes what James C. Scott (1990) refers to as the hidden and daily life transcripts, such as ingenuity, intelligence simulating ignorance, and irony, as well as those economic and social practices studied by Jan Rus (1995), which include mobility and appropriation of the missionary site. All of these acts had the intention of perpetuating the presence of these indigenous people and make possible their social reproduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009