Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Experts@Minnesota Home
Home
Profiles
Research units
University Assets
Projects and Grants
Research output
Press/Media
Datasets
Activities
Fellowships, Honors, and Prizes
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Rewriting the Mexican immigrant narrative: Situating indigeneity in Maya women's stories
M. Bianet Castellanos
American Studies
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
12
Scopus citations
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Rewriting the Mexican immigrant narrative: Situating indigeneity in Maya women's stories'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Colonial Logics
50%
Dominant Narrative
50%
Immigrant Narratives
100%
Indigeneity
100%
Indigenous Communities
50%
Indigenous Migration
50%
Indigenous Narrative
50%
Indigenous Peoples
50%
Latino Immigrants
50%
Latino Immigration
50%
Maya
100%
Mexican Immigrants
100%
Mexican Migration
50%
Migration Studies
50%
Settler Colonial
50%
Transnational
50%
Women's Stories
100%
Yucatec Maya
50%
Arts and Humanities
Indigeneity
100%
Indigenous Community
33%
Indigenous Peoples
33%
Mayas
100%
Narrative
100%
Re-writing
100%
Settler
33%
Transnational
33%
Yucatec Maya
33%