mestizo - ορισμός. Τι είναι το mestizo
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Τι (ποιος) είναι mestizo - ορισμός

SPANISH TERM TO DENOTE A PERSON WITH EUROPEAN AND INDIGENOUS AMERICAN ANCESTRY
Mestizos; Mestiza; Japanese-Mestizo; Mestizaje; Mestiso; Japanese mestizo; Mesticos; Mestico (Brazil); Mestizo people; Mestizx; Mestizaje in Latin America; Meztiso; Mestizos in the United States
  • [[Luis de Mena]], [[Virgin of Guadalupe]] and castas, 1750. The top left grouping is of an ''indio'' and an ''española'', with their Mestizo son. This is the only known casta painting with an ''indio'' man and española woman.
  •  [[Chavela Vargas]] Mixed-Costa Rican Born -  Singer
  • A [[casta]] painting by Miguel Cabrera. Here he shows a Spanish (español) father, Mestiza (mixed Spanish–American Indian) mother, and their Castiza daughter.
  • The dance group Joyas Mestizas ("Mestiza jewels") performs at the Fiestas Patrias Parade, South Park, [[Seattle]], 2017
  • A statue of [[Gonzalo Guerrero]], who adopted the Maya way of life and fathered the first mestizo children in [[Mexico]] and in the mainland [[Americas]] (the only mestizos before were those born in the Caribbean to Spanish men and Indigenous Caribbean women).
  • Casta painting showing 16 hierarchically arranged, mixed-race groupings. The top left grouping uses ''cholo'' as a synonym for ''mestizo''. Ignacio Maria Barreda, 1777. Real Academia Española de la Lengua, Madrid.
  • Statue of José Vasconcelos in Mexico City
  • Mestizo-Mestiza, Peru, circa 1770.
  • Painting of the First Independence Movement celebration in San Salvador, El Salvador. At the center, [[José Matías Delgado]], a Salvadoran priest and doctor known as El Padre de la Patria Salvadoreña (The Father of the Salvadoran Fatherland), alongside his nephew [[Manuel José Arce]], future Salvadoran president of the [[Federal Republic of Central America]].
  •  [[Keylor Navas]] Mixed-Costa Rican - [[Real Madrid]] Goalkeeper
  • Ronaldo]]

mestizo         
[m?'sti:z??]
¦ noun (fem. mestiza) (plural mestizos (or mestizas)) a Latin American of mixed race, especially the offspring of a Spaniard and an American Indian.
Origin
Sp. 'mixed', based on L. mixtus.
Mestizo         
·noun The offspring of an Indian or a negro and a European or person of European stock.
Mestizos         
·pl of Mestizo.

Βικιπαίδεια

Mestizo

Mestizo (; Spanish: [mesˈtiso] (listen); fem. mestiza) is a term used for ethno-racial classification to refer to a person of mixed European and Indigenous American ancestry. In certain regions such as Latin America, it may also refer to people who are culturally European even though their ancestors are not. The term was used as an ethno-racial exonym for mixed-race castas that evolved during the Spanish Empire. Although, broadly speaking, mestizo means someone of mixed European/Indigenous heritage, the term did not have a fixed meaning in the colonial period. It was a formal label for individuals in official documents, such as censuses, parish registers, Inquisition trials, and others. Priests and royal officials might have classified persons as mestizos, but individuals also used the term in self-identification.

The noun mestizaje, derived from the adjective mestizo, is a term for racial mixing that did not come into usage until the twentieth century; it was not a colonial-era term. In the modern era, mestizaje is used by scholars such as Gloria Anzaldúa as a synonym for miscegenation, but with positive connotations.

In the modern era, particularly in Latin America, mestizo has become more of a cultural term, with the term indio being reserved exclusively for people who have maintained a separate Indigenous ethnic and cultural identity, language, tribal affiliation, community engagement, etc. In late 19th- and early 20th-century Peru, for instance, mestizaje denoted those peoples with evidence of Euro-indigenous ethno-racial "descent" and access—usually monetary access, but not always—to secondary educational institutions. Similarly, well before the twentieth century, Euramerican "descent" did not necessarily denote Iberian American ancestry or solely Spanish American ancestry (distinct Portuguese administrative classification: mestiço), especially in Andean regions re-infrastructured by Euramerican "modernities" and buffeted by mining labor practices. This conception changed by the 1920s, especially after the national advancement and cultural economics of indigenismo.

To avoid confusion with the original usage of the term mestizo, mixed people started to be referred to collectively as castas. In some Latin American countries, such as Mexico, the concept of the Mestizo became central to the formation of a new independent identity that was neither wholly Spanish nor wholly Indigenous. The word mestizo acquired another meaning in the 1930 census, being used by the government to refer to all Mexicans who did not speak Indigenous languages regardless of ancestry.

During the colonial era of Mexico, the category Mestizo was used rather flexibly to register births in local parishes and its use did not follow any strict genealogical pattern. With Mexican independence, in academic circles created by the "mestizaje" or "Cosmic Race" ideology, scholars asserted that Mestizos are the result of the mixing of all the races. After the Mexican Revolution the government, in its attempts to create an unified Mexican identity with no racial distinctions, adopted and actively promoted the "mestizaje" ideology.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για mestizo
1. For that reason, I‘m now voting for him to go away." Barrero describes himself as mestizo and middle class.
2. Most Venezuelans are considered mestizo, a mix of Spanish, African and indigenous bloodlines that gives many a brown skin tone.
3. Humala is a mestizo with a middle–class upbringing whose fiercely nationalist father believes Peru‘s copper–skinned‘‘ majority should rule over its European–descended elite.
4. Humala belongs to a high–profile mestizo clan of avowed racists who believe Peru‘s "copper–colored" majority should have superior status over whites.
5. The conquistadores and their mixed descendants, the minority mestizo, had clung to power for 500 years until Morales‘s victory in December.