[On March 6th, 1836
the Alamo, a San Antonio fort and part of the newly independent Texan
Republic, fell to Mexican forces. That battle became a rallying cry for the
remainder of the war between Texas and Mexico, and so this week I’ve
AmericanStudied a handful of the ways the Alamo
has been remembered. Leading up to this special weekend post on Tejano
culture and legacies!]
On three
products of Tejano culture
(the cross-cultural Hispanic American community of South Texas).
1)
Gloria
Anzaldúa:
I said a lot of what I would want to say about the Tejano author, scholar,
poet, and general badass Gloria Anzaldúa in that hyperlinked post on her
groundbreaking, challenging, and wonderful book Borderlands/La Frontera. That book itself exemplifies Tejano
culture, from its multilingualism to its numerous crossings of genre borders to
its extended engagements with Mexican, indigenous, Anglo, and cross-cultural
histories, literatures, religions, and communities. But just as exemplary is Anzaldúa’s
homeland, the Rio
Grande Valley of South Texas: a region that, as that hyperlinked article
notes, suffers from some of America’s worst systemic poverty; that has become a
site of border contestations (as I write this post in early January President
Trump is planning to visit
RGV, and ironically enough Anzalduas Park, in support of his stupid border
wall); but that is also a rich resource of all the American histories and
stories Anzaldúa brought to life so pitch-perfectly.
2)
Tejano music: Speaking of pitch, in 21st
century America the word “Tejano” is often used specifically to refer to a broad genre of
popular music that has developed over centuries and become internationally known
over the last few decades. No single artist contributed more to that latter
trend than Selena,
the Mexican American singer who rose from South Texas roots to become a pop
sensation and icon before her
tragic murder by a former business associate when she was just 23. But of course
any musical genre is much bigger and more diverse than a single artist can
capture, and Tejano is even more so, as it combines Latin cultural traditions
like the corrido and mariachi music with European-influenced forms such as the
accordion-heavy polka (South Texas had significant German and Czech immigrant
communities in the 19th century). Embodied by early 20th
century musical and cultural pioneer Narciso
“Chicho” Martinez, this accordion-driven Latin-flavored music was like
nothing America or the world had ever seen, and has continued to evolve and
influence numerous other artists and genres over the century since.
3)
Tex-Mex cuisine: Not sure I have to write much
about the culinary glory that is Tex-Mex. But I suppose this much needs to be
said: as is often the case with national culinary traditions, what we call “Mexican
food” here in the United States is much more accurately
described as Mexican American food, as it differs greatly from cuisine in
Mexico itself and has evolved in much the same cross-cultural way as American
Chinese food (to cite the most famous such example). I could say some more
analytical stuff, but honestly I’m just lost in reveries of La Hacienda, my
childhood favorite restaurant and to my mind the once and future embodiment of
Tex-Mex. That it briefly turned into an Irish pub (which still served some of
its Tex-Mex classics!) before shutting its doors permanently and tragically when
I was in high school only adds one more layer to La Hacienda’s exemplification
of cross-cultural culinary perfection, and also as it turns out segues nicely
to next week’s St. Patrick’s Day series!
That next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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