Coyote (racial category): Difference between revisions

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*De Barcino y Cambuja, nace Calpamulato
*De Barcino y Cambuja, nace Calpamulato
*Indios Mecos bárbaros (Barbarian [[Chichimeca|Meco Indians]])-->
*Indios Mecos bárbaros (Barbarian [[Chichimeca|Meco Indians]])-->
==See also==
*[[Casta]]
*[[Cholo]]
==References==
{{reflist}}
==Further reading==
*Katzew, Ilona. ''Casta Painting: Images of Race in Eighteenth-Century Mexico''. New Haven: Yale University Press 2004.
{{Multiethnicity}}{{Miscegenation in Spanish colonies}}
[[Category:Latin American caste system]]
[[Category:Race (human categorization)]]

Latest revision as of 22:18, 23 January 2024

Coyote (fem. Coyota) (from the Nahuatl word coyotl, coyote) is a colonial Spanish American racial term for a mixed-race person casta that usually refers to a person born of parents, one of whom a Mestizo (mixed Spanish + Indigenous) and the other indigenous (indio). 

Representation

The casta paintings by Miguel Cabrera (1763) show the place of the coyote in the idealized colonial racial hierarchy (sistema de castas).[1] In colonial Mexico, the term varied regionally, with "regional differences determin[ing] just how much native ancestry qualified a person to be a coyote."[2]

  1. Katzew, Ilona. Casta Painting: Images of Race in Eighteenth-Century Mexico. New Haven: Yale University Press 2004.
  2. Vinson, Ben III. Before Mestizaje: The Frontiers of Race and Caste in Colonial Mexico. New York: Cambridge University Press 2018, p. 70.