Unsettling Journeys
Unsettling Journeys
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Відео

How did the exhibition come together? | Contemporary Ex-Votos: Devotion Beyond Medium
Переглядів 205Рік тому
In this video, we introduce the exhibition Contemporary Ex-Votos: Devotion Beyond Medium | A View of the Exhibition, currently on view until December 22, 2022 at NMSU Art Museum in Las Cruces, NM.
Unweaving the Myth of the West: John Ford's Stagecoach Anti-colonial Screening
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The Western has been described as the “great American form,” and seemingly the most purely “American” genre. While the Western’s popularity has waned in recent decades, the conventions and tropes it generated-most visible today in action-adventure and superhero films-continue to influence our expectations for contemporary storytelling. Despite its significant impact on the global popular imagin...
Art of the Americas: Global Perspectives (19th Century Art)
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The Virtual Salon Series presents Art of the Americas: Global Perspectives, co-sponsored by the Association of Historians of Nineteenth-Century Art (AHNCA) and the Dahesh Museum of Art. Three specialists, Asiel Sepúlveda (Moderator), Katherine Manthorne, and Emmanuel Ortega, will discuss this increasingly important area of nineteenth-century studies.
Not Your Watermelon: Resistance & Recovery in American Art
Переглядів 1332 роки тому
As part of the University of Illinois Chicago's (UIC) Art History Department Colloquium, Dr. Shana Klein, author of "The Fruits of Empire: Art, Food, and the Politics of Race in the Age of American Expansion," delivers a talk on the legacy of representations of watermelons in American art. Delving into the racialized representations of the fruit, she ends by connecting them to depictions of foo...
Is ROMA a Masterpiece? "Golden Age" Mexican Cinema has answers
Переглядів 1,2 тис.3 роки тому
In this lecture, we demystify Alfonso Cuarón's 2018 semi-autobiographical film ROMA and the problems with its representation of Indigenous Mexican women. By looking at the legacy of "Golden Age" Mexican Cinema and how it used the stories of indigenous women alongside the aesthetics of Mestizaje to celebrate nationalism, we dig deeper to understand what ROMA's big wins at the Oscars mean. READIN...
The Movie "Indian:" Alternative Pueblo Histories & New Representations
Переглядів 3233 роки тому
The Movie "Indian:" Alternative Pueblo Histories & New Representations
Is Frida CANCELLED? The Problematic Legacy of Mexican Modernism
Переглядів 3,2 тис.3 роки тому
Is Frida CANCELLED? The Problematic Legacy of Mexican Modernism
Women of Art History: Shana Klein
Переглядів 2853 роки тому
Women of Art History: Shana Klein
Refocusing Latinx Labor in Salt of the Earth and Why Cybraceros?
Переглядів 5113 роки тому
Refocusing Latinx Labor in Salt of the Earth and Why Cybraceros?
1.8 LESSON: Inventing the Cannibal
Переглядів 7673 роки тому
1.8 LESSON: Inventing the Cannibal
1.7 Indigenous people BEFORE the conquest
Переглядів 1,2 тис.3 роки тому
1.7 Indigenous people BEFORE the conquest
The Head of Joaquin Murrieta: A Conversation with John J. Valadez
Переглядів 3,3 тис.3 роки тому
The Head of Joaquin Murrieta: A Conversation with John J. Valadez
Dia de Muertos & Its Complexities as told by Dr. Babelito
Переглядів 1,2 тис.3 роки тому
Dia de Muertos & Its Complexities as told by Dr. Babelito
1.6 REACTIONS to The Castilians and Nationalism - feat. Michelle & Chava
Переглядів 2083 роки тому
1.6 REACTIONS to The Castilians and Nationalism - feat. Michelle & Chava
BONUS EPISODE: Dr. Babelito Explains el Grito Through Mexican Nationalism
Переглядів 3573 роки тому
BONUS EPISODE: Dr. Babelito Explains el Grito Through Mexican Nationalism
1.5 LESSON: The Legacy of the Reconquista in Latin America
Переглядів 7263 роки тому
1.5 LESSON: The Legacy of the Reconquista in Latin America
1.4 The Castilians & the Beginnings of National Pride - Mestizaje Through Art
Переглядів 2,1 тис.4 роки тому
1.4 The Castilians & the Beginnings of National Pride - Mestizaje Through Art
1.3 REACTION to Defining Mestizaje - Feat. Rosa Mama & Felipe Papa
Переглядів 4544 роки тому
1.3 REACTION to Defining Mestizaje - Feat. Rosa Mama & Felipe Papa
1.2 LESSON: Columbus' Landing and Erasing Native Resistance
Переглядів 2,6 тис.4 роки тому
1.2 LESSON: Columbus' Landing and Erasing Native Resistance
1.1 Defining Mestizaje and the Nature of History
Переглядів 6 тис.4 роки тому
1.1 Defining Mestizaje and the Nature of History
Tracking Latinx Identities through Art History
Переглядів 1 тис.4 роки тому
Tracking Latinx Identities through Art History
Castas II: Indios, Barbaros y Salvajes - The 17th Casta and the Anxiety of Native Resistance
Переглядів 4554 роки тому
Castas II: Indios, Barbaros y Salvajes - The 17th Casta and the Anxiety of Native Resistance
Castas I: 18th Century New Spain, the City and its People
Переглядів 1,5 тис.4 роки тому
Castas I: 18th Century New Spain, the City and its People
Week 3 Lesson 2: Public Performances of Power in Colonial Latin America
Переглядів 2914 роки тому
Week 3 Lesson 2: Public Performances of Power in Colonial Latin America
Week 3 Lesson 1: The Inquisition in Colonial Latin America - Autos-de-fé paintings
Переглядів 1,1 тис.4 роки тому
Week 3 Lesson 1: The Inquisition in Colonial Latin America - Autos-de-fé paintings

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @LauraaTondoor
    @LauraaTondoor 6 днів тому

    Fascinating thank you for sharing!

  • @mikeschroepfer8956
    @mikeschroepfer8956 29 днів тому

    I also rode the Joaquin Murreia trail. Even wrote a screenplay. I attended the Canuta ride for numerous years. 3 days of riding across Fresno County under the July sun. I found the John Rollings Ridge book creditable, but the Frank Lotta book was well researched from origonal sources. Yellow Bird had a gang member to tell him some of the story. There is no truth to the myth of Joaquin being a robin hood. He was a bandito. he chose the path of banditry. These were racist times. in the wild west of the gold diggings anybody who wasn't a white anglo was persicuted, It dosn;t matter if they were Chinese, mexican or whatever. The lynching and rape story don't hold up. but it was common for the time. After 2 year campain of terrorizing the placers the 49ers were pissed. Mustering the Rangers under Captian Love was the standad of the day. After a few months on the trail they discovered the mustaing fields and the hideout camp of the gang. After they interviewed the gang to register theri names for tax porpooses the gong got spooked. They were in the process of breaking camp and trailing their stolen horses. to Sinolia. After a panicked campain to ride away they paused at Tejon, for a blow, Joaquin split the gang, sending the remuda on to Mexcio they returned to Cantua. In the early dawn of July 23, 1853, The Rangers got the drop on some gang members. Where was Joaquin Valenzuela, one of the 5 Joauinn Vallenzuela listed on the warrent. Chappo, Joaquin (El Famoso) hoistler, groom, who was sponging down Joquin's horse El Tigrey. A dun. In that early morning light Chappo was a shadow, but he got recognized as Joaquion. A chase ensurd Chappo jumped on his saddled horse, and tried to get away. Bullets flied Chappo swingint into a Comache ride. bue he soon got shot down. The Rangers knew they got the gang, but they didn't know how. Accordint to Latta, the severed head got destroyed in the San Francisco earth quake.

  • @Sleep_SDE1979
    @Sleep_SDE1979 7 місяців тому

    Heres a presentation on the Inquisition in the 'New World:" ua-cam.com/video/G2nVdbxg2UU/v-deo.htmlsi=3uo-qIp38mN7iiqT

  • @mariadejesusgarciavargas6271
    @mariadejesusgarciavargas6271 10 місяців тому

    Actualmente, las celebraciones culturales y tradicionales se han convertido en un espectáculo para el turismo. Gran video profesor.

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    Spain and the Hispanic Monarchy promoted the mixed marriages all along 300 years. It was forbiden in all anglosaxon world until midle 20th Century, from Sweden, to Britain, to USA, to Neederlans.....

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    The racism is invented by anglosaxon culture, and developed with the adventum of british hegemony at 19th Century by scientific racism, derived to the eugenesic politics which become nazis proposals. The Hispanic culture never was racist. Never. For the catholic culture all the humans are equal ...not for the protestans and the wasp culture where the rich people are predestinated to domain because is a simbol of the favor of good. Please you need to reserch It...

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    Ridiculous is your view , typical view, of the cuadros de castas, those are an antropologycal view of the society in the frame of enlightment period and the manía of classify everthing. What we can see is a plural and complex society all equal inside de same Estamentus plebeyo ( nothing to compare with nobility or aristocracy),All well dressed and healthy even the poors, without prejudices to mixed up theirselves . The most avanced society of that era all over the world.

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    En solo 40 años los españoles en la Louisiana pusieron todo el orden y la cordura y buen hacer y desarrollo que no habían sido capaces los franceses en más de cien años. Y el mejor ejemplo es el capitán Fernando Leyba en San Luis de Illinois junto con el gobernador Bernardo Gálvez en Nueva Orleans .

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    Pureza de sangre no se refiere a la sangre sino a la cultura, católica o no , de tu familia. La pureza cultural católica...... En una época de guerra de religiones. El índigena es puro en sí mismo, será pagano al principio pero nunca hereje mientras no lleguen europeos herejes... La sangre física no importa en la cultura y la ley hispánica nunca.

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    There are more resistance, disturbs, fires, today against democracy in Europe last twenty years than in 200 years or Monarchy in Hispanic America.... Don't you?

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    Do you know the difference or similarity betwen a slave and a servant.... Do you the difference betwen the slavery in the anglosaxon world and laws versus the slave inside Hispanic world and laws? . You must to talk about that. Don't you?

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    The political order of the colony was the same that the political order of the peninsula of Spain, so the colonial regime is a fake, It was a kingdom, not a colony, am autónomous kingdom or viceroyalty.

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    Do you know how many people were burned or executed by the inquisition in all the Americas along 300 years? I will tell you, just Two or three dozens, and they were foreigners, pirates, Duch, French hugonotes, or British . Please, take It easy, the natives never were under inquisition by law.

  • @claramente8087
    @claramente8087 Рік тому

    Plebeyan society is not racial , is ESTAMENTAL. You must to know that Hispanic culture never was racista while the anglosaxon culture always was racist also yesterday even today.

  • @javierrocabado8503
    @javierrocabado8503 Рік тому

    Was the word “Indios” also meant “sin Dios”?

  • @javierrocabado8503
    @javierrocabado8503 Рік тому

    Thank you for this lessons I’m enjoying very much!

  • @aperson7777x
    @aperson7777x Рік тому

    thank you so much for this work! i appreciate detail and care you put into creating this presentation.

  • @JB-le6zm
    @JB-le6zm Рік тому

    Can someone tell me what the "smoke bomb" that was used is called? Hot pepper 🌶️ wrapped in straw??

  • @Duffmanee
    @Duffmanee Рік тому

    L

  • @curtisbrien692
    @curtisbrien692 Рік тому

    𝕡𝕣𝕠𝕞𝕠𝕤𝕞

  • @evelynencalada8037
    @evelynencalada8037 2 роки тому

    Muchas gracias por este gran labor! Loving these videos and knowledge!

  • @keindahre3413
    @keindahre3413 2 роки тому

    ua-cam.com/video/Op-2-LqzHMY/v-deo.html I cant even speak w/o these ppl taking my comments down.. they really dont wat yall to see im here

  • @sirsaca6026
    @sirsaca6026 2 роки тому

    Hiii. First I wanna say thanks to you and Justin for Latinos Who Launch. Definitely one of my favorite podcasts. Regarding the video, I wanted to ask if there are any books/papers that focus specifically on the clothing that was assigned to specific groups (like the manga, which you mentioned in the video) and also could you say that those standards of cast clothing are still present in traditional Mexican clothing like el terno yucateco in contrast with the hipil?

  • @lindavasquezrubio8612
    @lindavasquezrubio8612 2 роки тому

    So in love with this channel. I homeschool my daughter, and I am incredibly grateful for all of your videos. Dr. Babelito, are you teaching now? Does Unsettling Journeys have a list of book recommendations (your favorites)?

  • @Traductorero
    @Traductorero 2 роки тому

    I'm a Filipino and I think the concept of mestizaje is important for our cultural identity too which has become quite amorphous in today's sociopolitical climate

    • @Coconut____________214
      @Coconut____________214 Рік тому

      But Filipinos aren’t American Indians.

    • @Traductorero
      @Traductorero Рік тому

      Yes but also we're situated geographically and historically at a crossroads of many different cultures and the arrival of Spain totally redirected our cultural development in comparison to our neighbors. The lingua franca changed 3 times, from some form of Bahasa prior to Spain, to Spanish during the 300 years of colonization, to English during the 50 or so years during American colonization, and finally to a combination of Tagalog and English today. And that's just language, there's also religion, customs, beliefs, social structures. I can say a lot about this, and perhaps mestizaje may not be the correct term for it, but certainly it is hard to deny that our culture is a bit of an aberration compared to our neighbors.

  • @Loriddian
    @Loriddian 2 роки тому

    ughhh... get to the frigging point. 👎

    • @UnsettlingJourneys
      @UnsettlingJourneys 2 роки тому

      Hi Ashra, the conversation about Frida begins at 10:35 . Please keep watching!

  • @NORTHERNKINGDOMPROPHETS
    @NORTHERNKINGDOMPROPHETS 2 роки тому

    This book is right up your alley “Global Indios:” The Indigenous Struggle for Justice in Sixteenth-Century Spain Book by Nancy Deusen

  • @xuenkitze1317
    @xuenkitze1317 2 роки тому

    Yes see wore customs. Tribal people do not were customs. She did not represent tribal people. She represented herself, jewish and communist. Sovereign Tribal nations are not part of any hispanic new age movement.

  • @lore4556
    @lore4556 2 роки тому

    Loved watching this, and the discussion of convention, because Stagecoach is really The blueprint for all the damage westerns did, and to continue to contribute to and evolve this or any genre is to have these discussions. Stagecoach made landscapes and settings into a living thing but at the same time distorting its relationships to its inhabitants, like the point about its particular western setting being a location of failure and hostility, and the way native people are a prop that feeds the energy of the characterization of that setting. I'm excited for that film project, Mr. Ramos-Barajas

  • @cuacomekiki
    @cuacomekiki 2 роки тому

    23:00 "Santiago mataindios" was a funding myth adopted by the very own "indios" Chachapoyas, Cañaries, Huancas, who fought alongside Pizarroetc . It was belief that the Saint appeared in the battlefield to side with those natives against the ruling Inca empire therefore, St. James does not fight all "Indians" but only the Incas. Most of these icons are painted by indigenous/mestizo people and Santiago is highly worshipped in perú as "libertador" of the Incas nowadays.

  • @cuacomekiki
    @cuacomekiki 2 роки тому

    Indigenous were not powerless victims in New Spain but a thriving social majority in their own societies. Indigenous peoples *massively* took part on the conquista in a common cause. Read "Indian conquistadors published by the U of Oklahoma Press". 99 out 100 soldiers in the Cortes army were indigenous who raised against abusive tributes, ritualistic torture, and systemic human sacrifices by the Aztec (Mexica) empire. Including children and women. After the fall of Tenochtitlán, Mexicas themselves joined Alvarado to conquer Guatemala and then, Florida, (this is why some neighborhoods there are still called Mexicatzlingo, meaning little Mexico in nahuatl. (Antonio Rubial, PhD.). Hundreds of cities North of Tenochtitlán were founded and built by leading and thriving Tlaxcaltecas who preserved their form of government after the Spanish. Nahuatl was never as widely spoken as with the Spanish co-government. Indigenous conquistadores buildt all the cities north of "the Great Chichimeca" and their language became offical in New Spain by the King Phillip the 2nd becoming the most spoken language, before Spain left. *The Inquisition had no jurisdiction on indigenous; they were no "Sauron eye" as they judged 0 (zero) natives in 300 years* please go read the article published on the very own government of Mexico website by the INAH, signed by the expert C. Maquivar PhD. The holy court condemned to dead 43 (forty-three) people in 300 years ( Think of the US death rows numbers in one year) As for the "casta system" it has been academically challenged, if not completely refuted by Ben Vilson Ph.D and Pilar Gonzalvo, Ph.D and so other scholars who point out that "casta system" is a made up terminology coined in the 20th century. Caste´s names obey to a taxonomic (labeling) scientific trend in the 18th century and held barely any legal implications.

  • @jackmurrieta8513
    @jackmurrieta8513 2 роки тому

    was any murrietas contacted about the head or was it felt or e en. conciddred to on doing it u cuz its kinda a comon things a person would naturay do vi e to his people in that instance e tallow the murrieta families to provide us opertunity to gi e a proper bArial im saying wat happened to that concern about the descendants even tho that not our take on the unfolding. of events .altho tbier are no records birth death certificate altho ther are baptism and court alearence wedding as best man wich im following up o reference and by no mean I'm I credited for any level of history knowledge other than of my own gi e history passed in tho me but I have a unstoppable determination to find this true so many have have actual barried the basic clearity of his with all these stories told added repting none truth s or things thar r misleading information thay takes people father from n is truth and in the pro ess allow others to to say was ther even a joaquin ? he exist to us n real to use he has a spot in our iy tree that give us a sence of atacment to the history of California we r all part of that spirit for our a symbol an example of resistance of leadership against wrongs that society may cast upon society the inspiration of joaqui n has become a comon element of a chicanos up bringing they r told about lik joaquin Pancho zapata as outlaw spirits paving the wat planting the seed for other such a ceasar chavez and the rest that fall under that sanme spirit that wond or wouldn't bend to unfairness dominance or superiority above the next thety stood up

  • @caroespinoza9287
    @caroespinoza9287 2 роки тому

    Enjoyed this different perspective vs what has been narrated in the past.

  • @nemesis3958
    @nemesis3958 2 роки тому

    As a white american who isn't able to trace my history without giving away DNA to a business, but assume it's German (probably mid-19th century immigration) based on where my family seems to have found itself comfortable (I'm from one of the few thousand towns which claims to have the most bars per sq. foot as though that's an accomplishment, while not being a town that's Cathlo-centric -- it's still Christo-centric, don't get me wrong, however starting with my single mother we've been non-religious simply because it isn't of use to us) while working various common labor jobs (cobbler is first occupation I know of... and that's only 80 years back, my great-grandfather, who had a King James nowhere-close-to-1st-edition bible that I don't believe was ever opened by anyone based on the crispy, pristine strange smelling gold painting on the exposed page edges), think you two are doing something great. Very happy to see you are still uploading as well, and hope your videos end up getting the attention this narrative deserves (your guys' demeanors, to me, are perfect -- especially for this subject). I'm watching your video in part of my learning journey and hope to join in helping (not your channel lol, not on some stalker shtuff) in the future once I've started to piece a solid foundation of this history puzzle together, specifically the assigning of Consuls (who are Spaniard government career types) that then transfer their 'power' to a Marquess/Marquis (who are prevalent Spanish-born business types) that has been installed under the Consul -- very intentionally entrenching them in the foreign political socioeconomic-sphere in a subversive manner, and if that didn't work then in an overt strong-armed way -- to domains. These end up being the people who, as merchants & pseudo-but-very-real government figures that are washed from general history but whose legacy carries on in a very real way within their family (as most still profit from and live on the very land that was stolen), go on to quash thought, understanding, revolutions, nature,... you name it. I've found all wiki pages of these people (the 1st marquis/marquess of lands), thus far, marked as needing checked for their lack of citations, for obvious biases, etc.. For instance, here's a fella I had up before taking a break and looking up vids: "Joaquín de la Pezuela, 1st Marquess of Viluma". These people's descendants are, you guess it, still in power. Have you ever looked up "John William Friso, Prince of Orange" genealogy and where his descendants have ended up? Mind blowing how little time it takes to look at a genealogy like his and what it teaches about the world compared to most's' schooling on history. Here's his condensed genealogy: i.redd.it/8ct984dlyvl71.png (not made by me). Through constant map recreation, massacring natives and disenfranchised populations whose oral stories & records were either manipulated or done away with, along with the creation of physical records in varying languages that purposefully tell varying stories/info (even going so far as using the Spanish/French version of a first name's first initial in combination with using the first initial of the English version of the middle or surname; i.e. rather than G.W. for George Washington somewhere along the family they've changed it to Jorge Washington and George is ever only remembered as "J. Washington" then eventually just "J.W.", etc.), history has been more deeply obfuscated than I've ever imagined. Thanks fellas and take care.

  • @luisusero8507
    @luisusero8507 2 роки тому

    Muy mal orientado históricamente. Este video tiene los habituales defectos de cuando se toma el modelo histórico anglosajón. A la conquista y el imperio español no le cuadran términos como colonias o colonial. Era un imperio católico. Además se deja llevar desde el minuto 1 por los errores de la Leyenda Negra.

    • @UnsettlingJourneys
      @UnsettlingJourneys 2 роки тому

      Querido Luis, muchas gracias por tu comentario. Como respuesta queremos aclarar que el imperio español siempre fue impulsado por el colonialismo. Así que no se puede hablar de este imperio sin mencionar sus colonias o lo colonial. Sin importar sus intenciones religiosas, el resultado es innegable: la destrucción casi total de culturas indígenas y de sus maneras de ver y entender el mundo. También queremos mencionar que estamos conscientes que la leyenda negra fue creada y difundida por los países protestantes europeos para combatir el poder hegemónico del imperio español. Habiendo dicho esto, con o sin leyenda negra, el imperio español católico explotó y extrajo recursos naturales y humanos a un costo muy grande para las comunidades marginalizadas de las américas. Desde nuestro punto de vista, es importante no estancarnos en narrativas nacionalistas; rechazando los hechos de la historia simplemente porque hacen ver a nuestros países de origen en una mala luz. Para poder avanzar, es importante escribir nuevas historias que hagan justicia para reparar los errores del pasado. Una nueva corriente en la historiografía es tratar de entender el enredo de imperios y comparar las maneras en que el imperio anglosajón fue influido por el imperio español en el mundo atlántico. Comprender la manera en que la leyenda negra fue creada es una gran parte de esta nueva narrativa.

    • @luismanueluseroliso7683
      @luismanueluseroliso7683 2 роки тому

      @@UnsettlingJourneys Creo que no me he explicado bien. Al imperio católico español no le cuadra la expresión "colonial" porque España nunca tuvo colonias en el sentido europeo (británico, holandés o francés) de la palabra. Todos los territorios y subditos estaban sometidos a la misma autoridad con las mismas leyes, cuando era posible por el rey, y en su lugar por virreyes. En cuanto a la Leyenda Negra no es deplorable por el hecho de ser obra de los enemigos de España, sino por ser falsa y racista. Saludos.

  • @eprohoda
    @eprohoda 2 роки тому

    Yo,omg- so splendidb roth-

  • @elratuniversaldeealyortiz6317
    @elratuniversaldeealyortiz6317 2 роки тому

    Frida's self portrait sold for 35 MD!

  • @lilianaonate2218
    @lilianaonate2218 2 роки тому

    Fantastic!!!! Thank you for your excellent, engaging and great information!!!!

  • @BadAssDad101
    @BadAssDad101 2 роки тому

    I am Obsessed with this story. I live in San Benito Co. I research as much as I can, even though it makes me sound crazy every time I try to tell story.. I'd love to help any way I can.

  • @yourheartwanders655
    @yourheartwanders655 2 роки тому

    Hello! I absolutely loved this podcast and I am interested in doing a podcast with you guys on Chicanos traveling. I would love to give the perspective of culture shock of a Mexican American traveling to Mexico and other countries in Central and South America. Please reach back , I would to talk to yall :)

  • @matthewmann8969
    @matthewmann8969 2 роки тому

    Yeah the paintings, colorings, drawings, sketchings, sculpturings, and potteries are all so detailed

  • @caitlinherrera3976
    @caitlinherrera3976 2 роки тому

    Watching this before going to the Frida Kahlo: Timeless exhibition 👍

  • @davidsmith1931
    @davidsmith1931 3 роки тому

    He was real. People were so scared of Joaquin Murrieta they did not cut his head for a trophy they cut it off and brought it to all the towns that he and the Joaquin 5 had terrorized so that the people could see it and go on with there lives without living in fear that he would return. I got this information years ago from an old cowboy that lived in ca in the 1850s.

  • @joeldelarosa874
    @joeldelarosa874 3 роки тому

    So happy to find this! I love it

  • @beforeyourimmigrants8471
    @beforeyourimmigrants8471 3 роки тому

    Mestizos are mixed race supremacists. The guy that wrote The cosmic race is great example. They have a disdain for a indigenous & African cultures. They value their European bloodline but still show hostility towards it because they're not accepted. They are interesting people.

    • @nicholasrodriguez4990
      @nicholasrodriguez4990 2 роки тому

      It doesn’t have to be that way we can embrace all of our heritage/bloodlines

  • @lucasformato4890
    @lucasformato4890 3 роки тому

    Our people are a mix of 2 ancient races and civilisations that became one

  • @kimgalbraith8642
    @kimgalbraith8642 3 роки тому

    I really like where you mention "we should talk about him, but not celebrate him." This is true with so much of history that is "gritty".

  • @kimgalbraith8642
    @kimgalbraith8642 3 роки тому

    I was wondering who is singing at 0:42?

  • @marymagana465
    @marymagana465 3 роки тому

    Dr Babelito, I love the true view of Mexico history!

  • @jackmurrieta8513
    @jackmurrieta8513 3 роки тому

    My name is Don joaquin murrieta an a direct descendent of the family murrietas of that time that joaquin is a part of joaquin murrieta orozco ...joaquins true name the head the that was said to be joaquin murrieta is not joaquin it is known by the family that joaquin murrieta was not at the cantua creek shoot out altho he came back wen he got word to Barry his fellow gang members who lost there lives in support of joaquin goal to recapture California for his people joaquin live n made it back to Mexico where he lived to be about 70 years old and was buried in cocupe Mexico altho the head was not joaquin murrietas it was a joaquin vallenzuela a cousin of joaquin that served as a captain to one of 5 crews that worked with the others that allowed them to actually conduct his business in with a wider scope of ereas as with the others thus to create u gas confusion e with an element of illusion hiting 3 places at one time on the same day .

    • @jackmurrieta8513
      @jackmurrieta8513 3 роки тому

      Sangremurrieta.......

    • @jackmurrieta8513
      @jackmurrieta8513 3 роки тому

      Question why didn't u contact any murrietas that u were in tho posesion of the head thot to be joaquin so they may provide proper barrial pass the remains to us .altho the head isn't joaquins u were not aware of it .that would be something thot a person would contact over remains so that the family would be able to provide an honorable barrier!?