Abstract
This article imagines abolitionist politics in the Yucatán peninsula as one group, known as U jeets'el le ki'ki’ kuxtal, pushes against one portion of Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador's development plan known as the “Tren Maya.” I contend that U je'etsel's calls for autonomy speak to forms of radical abolitionist politics present in the United States, where we might observe the centrality of land in both abolition and decolonization. To this end, I first provide a definition of a trans feminist abolition radically focused on the otherwise, or the eradication of all forms of social oppression. This definition is followed by close readings of U je'etsel's communiqués regarding AMLO's 2021 visit to the Yucatán peninsula and the continued role the so-called “Caste War” plays in attempts to expand nationalized colonization into the region. My final goal is to proffer that “Caste War” constitutes a historicized form of radical autonomy as well as project of abolition subject to forces that seek to vacate it of its liberatory power. I demonstrate that part of U je'etsel's discursive project is to reclaim the “Caste War” narrative as part of an emancipatory project involving a radical reclaiming of autonomy's regional history.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Sociology and Political Science,Cultural Studies
Reference35 articles.
1. El Tren Maya;Adrián,2019
2. Ancona
Eligio
. 1878. Historia de Yucatán, Desde La Época [Sic] Más Remota Hasta Nuestros Días: La Guerra Social. 5 vols. Mérida: Impr. de M. Heredia Argüelles. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/007032688.
3. Building an Abolitionist Trans and Queer Movement with Everything We've Got;Bassichis,2015
4. Black Trans Feminism
5. Boellstorff
Tom
, CabralMauro, CárdenasMicha, CottenTrystan, StanleyEric A., YoungKalaniopua, and AizuraAren Z.2014. “Decolonizing Transgender: A Roundtable Discussion.” TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly1: 419–39. https://doi.org/10.1215/23289252-2685669.