Book Talk: Undoing Modernity: Linguistics, Higher Education, and Indigeneity in Yucatan

-Event-

Start Date: Apr 10, 2025 - 03:00pm

Location: Zoom

On Thursday, April 10 at 3 PM via Zoom, Dr. Catherine Rhodes will present her book talk: Undoing Modernity: Linguistics, Higher Education, and Indigeneity in Yucatan. Register for the talk here

Abstract

On the Yucatan Peninsula today, undergraduates are inventing a new sense of being Maya by studying linguistics and culture in their own language: Maya. In so doing, they are engaging and challenging stereotypical understandings of what counts as ‘Maya’, be that people, their language, or other cultural practices. Undoing Modernity follows students and their teachers as they upset the seemingly stable ethnic definition of Maya, with its reliance on a firm dichotomy between Maya and modern. Doing linguistics in Maya does not prove that Maya is modern but instead rejects the Maya-ness that modernity built, while also fostering within the university an intellectual space in which students articulate identity on their own terms. Created through colonization of the Americas, modernity is the counterpart to coloniality; the students, Rhodes suggests, are creating decoloniality’s companion: “demodernity.” Undoing Modernity dares to
imagine the world on the other side of colonial/modern ideals of Indigeneity. 

Catherine R. Rhodes is an Assistant Professor in the Anthropology Department and affiliated faculty in Latin American Studies; Educational Linguistics; and OILS at UNM. She is a semiotic and linguistic anthropologist of education and conducts research primarily on the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. She is a co-author of Migration Narratives, co-producer of the film Adelante, and is co-authoring with Ahearn the 4th edition of Living Language and Spanish-language 1st edition, El Lenguaje Vivo. She is currently a Fulbright U.S. Scholar fellow to Mexico, where she is internationalizing linguistic anthropology by developing curricula in Spanish. Dr. Rhodes holds a dual-Ph.D. in Anthropology and Education (UPenn), an M.A. in the Social Sciences (Linguistic Anthropology) (UChicago), and a B.A. in Latin American Studies (UNC-Chapel Hill).

This event is free and open to the public. Individuals of all abilities are encouraged to attend LAII-sponsored events. If you require a reasonable accommodation to participate in one of our events, please visit laii.unm.edu/events/accessibility.html or contact laiioutreach@unm.edu The event is co-sponsored by the UNM Department of Anthropology and the UNM Latin American and Iberian Institute.