On August 13, 1521, the largest and most developed of North
America's societies, the Aztec empire, fell to Spanish invaders
who, along with later European colonizers, built new societies in
which they occupied the dominant class positions and forced
Indians, imported African slaves, and Asians into subordinate
positions. As a result of the conquest, race has become an enduring
issue in the class structuring of North American societies.
Originally published as "After the Fifth Sun: Class and Race in
North America," this new, significantly expanded edition offers a
comparative exploration of how patterns of class and racial
inequality developed in the United States, Mexico, and Canada from
colonial pasts to the beginning of the North American Free Trade
Agreement and the post-NAFTA environment. What Russell reveals is a
continent of diverse historical experiences, class systems, and
ways of thinking about race.
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