
Contents
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The grounds of rebellion The grounds of rebellion
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Savagery and slavery in the Plan de San Diego Savagery and slavery in the Plan de San Diego
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“The Negro Free” “The Negro Free”
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Landscapes Of Death And The Texan Nation Landscapes Of Death And The Texan Nation
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The Unburied at San Jacinto The Unburied at San Jacinto
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Emerging from the brush unscathed: savagery and manhood Emerging from the brush unscathed: savagery and manhood
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter will explore the multivalent discourses of civilization, savagery, and manhood that run through some of the Mexican and U.S. textual residues of the1915 Plan de San Diego uprising in South Texas, and its brutal repression. Examining the cultural texts produced during and after the conflict offers insight into the ways in which the historical violence of U.S. expansion and its contestation were imagined by U.S. authors, law enforcement, and press, as well as ethnic Mexican radicals and militants. While the Plan de San Diego visionaries called for the liberation of the black race and an end to the racist oppression of U.S. capitalism, their analysis of the present and vision of the future evoke a more ambiguous reading of blackness than their call for common struggle might initially suggest.
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