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Mexican Monstrosity Main MenuAztec Monsters - Gods and Human SacrificeColonial Monsters- Hernan Cortes & La MalincheForeign Monsters- The Mexican-American WarModern Human Monsters- Narcos, Skin-Color Gap, and Violence Against WomenBibliographyKarma M Yange2e836beb279d24af3e75c03f88d919e7e377831
Mexican Monstrosity
1media/Screen Shot 2020-05-11 at 9.44.37 PM.pngmedia/Screen Shot 2020-05-11 at 9.44.37 PM.pngmedia/Screen Shot 2020-05-11 at 9.44.37 PM.png2020-05-11T17:00:39-07:00Karma M Yange2e836beb279d24af3e75c03f88d919e7e3778313728622image_header2020-05-12T17:14:04-07:00Karma M Yange2e836beb279d24af3e75c03f88d919e7e377831The concept of monstrosity is an ambiguous one that has shifted and changed it's shape with time and location. To most, monsters have become associated with fear. In many ways, they have become physical and conceptual embodiments of the things we fear most as individuals and even societies. Mexican Monstrosity is a curated exhibit which displays and analyzes the "monsters," in a historically chronological order, found in Mexican society.