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Audible Ancestors
Tamborazo Music and Indigenous Memory in the Borderlands
Audible Ancestors
Tamborazo Music and Indigenous Memory in the Borderlands
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Description
Audible Ancestors provides a new understanding of music performance and the inheritance of Indigenous epistemologies and methodologies in Greater Mexico.
By examining the audibility of Indigenous ancestry in the negotiation of Mexican subjectivities through danza performance, author Luis Chávez-González amplifies muted Caxcan Indigeneity rooted in the sounds of Regional Mexican music through tamborazo-Zacatecano, a drum-centered style originating from northcentral Mexico.
Based on extensive musical ethnographic research between the US/Mexico border, this book offers an inter-musicological depth to Indigenous sound studies, Indigenous performativity, self-determination, decolonizing methodologies, and borderlands research. This new research considers Indigenous sonic cartographies that continue to that defy erasure amidst US and Mexican colonial normative paradigms by musically crossing, re-crossing, and reimagining place and belonging.
Table of Contents
2. Borders
3. La Danza De Los Tastuanes
4. Memory, Time, And Space In The Archive
5. Sensorial Technology
6. Greater Mexico, Technepantlan, And The Virtual Pueblo
7. Conclusion (In Cuicatl)
References
Index
Product details
| Published | 06 Aug 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 216 |
| ISBN | 9798765134573 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Dimensions | 229 x 152 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Audible Ancestors is an exemplary study of how ceremonial music and dance articulate and sustain Indigenous continuity across colonial and national borders. Through meticulous ethnography, theoretical rigor, and profound ethical care, Luis Chávez-González reveals how tamborazo grooves, song, and tastuán dance performances function as technologies of memory, sovereignty, and situated knowledge. Bridging ethnomusicology, Native American studies, and Borderlands theory, the author advances the concept of 'sovereign acoustemology' to show how music renders Indigenous ancestry audible-and therefore susceptible to be felt-across Mexico and its diaspora. Eclectic, yet cohesive in method, the book will appeal to scholars interested in decoloniality and to readers seeking to understand how musical sounds mediate history, migration, and Indigenous self-determination in Mexico, the United States, and beyond.
Juan Diego Díaz, Associate Professor of Music, University of California, Davis, USA
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In Audible Ancestors, Chávez-González dances and sings an important contemporary contribution to Indigenous studies of sound and movement into being, refusing colonial assumptions and reframing a brilliant interdisciplinary group of influences to amplify Tamborazo music, dance, and memory.
John-Carlos Perea, Chair of Ethnomusicology, University of Washington, USA
























