
Premium Episode 6: Moorish Nationals and Indigenous Erasure! (sample)
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05/17/22 • 17 min
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Moorish Nationals and Indigenous Erasure! (sample)
In this episode, we explore the "Moor" identity movement, it's history, and how it is actively weaponizing pseudohistory in order to erase the accomplishments of Indigenous and African people. Also, Kurly learns about ad blockers.
So strap yourselves in, because its a bumpy ride!
Start for FREE
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
RSVP for the Yazzie/Martinez Community Gathering!
Find us:
Merch: Shop Aztlantis
Book: The Four Disagreements: Letting Go of Magical Thinking
listener comments? Feedback? Shoot us a text!
Moorish Nationals and Indigenous Erasure! (sample)
In this episode, we explore the "Moor" identity movement, it's history, and how it is actively weaponizing pseudohistory in order to erase the accomplishments of Indigenous and African people. Also, Kurly learns about ad blockers.
So strap yourselves in, because its a bumpy ride!
Start for FREE
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
RSVP for the Yazzie/Martinez Community Gathering!
Find us:
Merch: Shop Aztlantis
Book: The Four Disagreements: Letting Go of Magical Thinking
Previous Episode

Dispatches From Aztlantis: STOP erasing Chicanos and Mexican Americans!
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STOP erasing Chicanos and Mexican Americans!
In this brief Dispatch from Aztlantis, your host Kurly Tlapoyawa talks about how "latino" is used in mainstream media to actively ERASE our people!
Cited in this episode:
https://www.minoritynewsnetwork.com/2022/04/28/where-are-the-chicano-intellectuals/
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/political-cartoonist-lalo-alcaraz-becomes-first-latino-win-prestigious-rcna18551
https://www.yahoo.com/video/ago-were-picking-fruit-dad-173018274.html
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/mexican-american-first-latina-president-harvard-law-review-rcna14358
Start for FREE
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
RSVP for the Yazzie/Martinez Community Gathering!
Find us:
Merch: Shop Aztlantis
Book: The Four Disagreements: Letting Go of Magical Thinking
Next Episode

Episode 31: Azteca or Mexica?
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Azteca or Mexica?
For this episode, I will be drawing heavily from the article “the word Azteca was not created by Von Humboldt” written by Ruben Ochoa, which originally appeared on the website Mexika.org.
Whenever some well-meaning individual posts a link to an article about any aspect of Aztec history to social media, they are inevitably met with a barrage of comments that usually sound something like this:
“actually, they never called themselves Aztecs. They called themselves Mexica.”
That refrain, or something very similar to it, has been repeated time and time again by countless Chicanos, Mexicanos, cultural practitioners, historians, etc., for who knows how long. Hell, even I used to say it about twenty to twenty-five years ago.
Back then, the argument started innocently enough, I suppose.
“We didn’t call ourselves Aztec. That’s what an anthropologist called us ‘cause they didn’t know what we called ourselves.” And that in turn turned into an anthropologist coming up with that name as an umbrella term to lump all the people of the Valley of Mexico together. That further changed to a white anthropologist decided to call us that, and then that white anthropologist became more specifically European. At some point we even managed to identify the culprit who dared sully us with a name not our own, and that perpetrator has been identified as none other than Alexander Von Humboldt. People have become so confident that the above is true that the new chorus, with all the certitude in the world, is that Alexander Von Humboldt is to blame for the very existence of the word “Aztec,” a word that was presumably never uttered by our people.
But Is this really true? Is the word Aztec or Azteca solely an invention of 18th century scholars? Well, not exactly.
Your host:
Kurly Tlapoyawa is an archaeologist, ethnohistorian, and filmmaker. His research covers Mesoamerica, the American Southwest, and the historical connections between the two regions. He is the author of numerous books and has presented lectures at the University of New Mexico, Yale University, San Diego State University, and numerous others. He is currently a professor of Chicano Studies at the Colegio Chicano del Pueblo, a free online educational institution.
@kurlytlapoyawa
Cited in this podcast:
Ruben Ochoa, “The Word ‘Azteca’ Was NOT Created by Von Humboldt!,” Mexika.org (blog), May 31, 2014, https://mexika.org/2014/05/31/the-word-azteca-was-not-created-by-von-humboldt/.
Start for FREE
Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.
RSVP for the Yazzie/Martinez Community Gathering!
Find us:
Merch: Shop Aztlantis
Book: The Four Disagreements: Letting Go of Magical Thinking
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