»f ICIA prof tells Aggies * exican ‘types’ wrong THE BATTALION Page 11 THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1979 By JAMES HAMILTON tv.rtn Battalion Reporter Today’s prevalent definitions of 3viet rK culture — from both social aOthropoligical standpoints — accurate, a UCLA anthropol professor told a Texas A&M Kty audience Tuesday night. ITe. Limon spoke to the MSC Iniittee for Awareness of Mexi- American Culture on the topic m l Identity and the Texas- „ Community.” _pn sa id that throughout Texas ■there have.been several mis- tions,” cenilefinitions of Mexican cul- first notion of Mexican cul- provi Jlwhat 1 call a stereotypic cul- * ’iLimon said. This consists of ■pL of alledged behavior pat- R va lue patterns and beliefs that e attributed to a population by opl#external to that population, "in this case, external people per- ived Mexican culture and began K te a series of observations ..jey think Mexican people whetbfcall about. display Jjmon said the first stereotyping rces - .Mexicans in Texas can be traced omb si ck to Texas’ pre-statehood days. . said it began when American oviet > fronti snian sas >rth win et and ,j ie reside Jvacuats settlers first encountered Mexican farmers and ranchers in what is now the southern Rio Grande Valley. “The first contact was essentially hostile and resulted in a dominant- subordinate system of social rela tions, which more or less tends to be characteristic even today,” Limon said. He added that the most common stereotypic ideas were that Mexi cans were lazy, inclined toward criminal mischief, and hypersexual. “We are dealing with unrealities here,” he said. “Never mind the fact that most of these people did and still do work from sunrise to sun down. A study of the land transfers in southern Texas might lead one to certain types of questions about where the criminality really lies, but never mind that fact. The point is that the perception of Mexicans was very early tainted by this business of criminality — the Mexican as a bandit.” Limon said the situation became worse in the early 1900s when the movie industry began. He said that many of the first movies were West erns in which the villains were usu ally portrayed as either Mexicans or Indians. He said that during the late 1950s and early 1960s, “limited” an thropological research was done on the Mexican population of southern Texas. The researchers examined Mexican family life, religion, medicine and “core values.” Their findings, Limon said, indi cated that Mexicans didn’t think to ward the future, had an enormous suspicion of their fellow men and women, and possessed a “deep and pervasive sense of fatalism.” Limon disagrees. “I came from Laredo, Texas,” he said, “and I have cousins spread up and down the river (the Rio Grande) on both sides. I don’t like that pic ture in some sort of emotional, vis ceral way.” Limon said he does agree with some of the other findings, such as those that indicate a sense of strong family unity. “Most of us will agree that the family is important in Mexican cul ture and that there appears to be a different importance for the family — different, that is, at least in inten sity from the data we have on Anglo-American society,” Limon said. AGGIES! Douglas How about some beans & cornbread for lunch? 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