"Catherine Rhodes takes a new theoretical approach to enduring questions of Mayan language revitalization, standardization, and pedagogy from a grounded ethnographic perspective. Undoing Modernity makes substantial contributions to transdisciplinary understandings of decolonization, Indigeneity, and critical efforts to configure unequal worlds differently." - Brigittine M. French, Grinnell College, author of Maya Ethnolinguistic Identity: Violence, Cultural Rights, and Modernity in Highland Guatemala
"This lively and detailed work raises the question of what it means to be Maya-and by extension, what it means to be Indigenous-through the process of undoing modernist approaches to language and culture. Throughout her deep ethnographic study of a Maya university in the Yucatan, Catherine Rhodes challenges us to reconsider the intellectual and institutional foundations that we often take for granted." - Anna M. Babel, The Ohio State University, author of Between the Andes and the Amazon: Language and Social Meaning in Bolivia