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A history of the Mexican-American people
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0268005451 026800546X Year: 1977 Publisher: London University of Notre Dame Press

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Aztlán: terre volée, terre promise: les pérégrinations du peuple chicano
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ISBN: 2728801479 9782728801473 Year: 1989 Publisher: Paris: École normale supérieure,

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The emergence of Mexican America : recovering stories of Mexican peoplehood in U.S. culture
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0814775586 9780814775578 0814775578 0814776191 0814777309 1435607384 Year: 2006 Publisher: New York London New York University Press

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Winner of the 2006 Thomas J. Lyon Book Award in Western American Literary Studies, presented by the Western Literature AssociationIn The Emergence of Mexican America, John-Michael Rivera examines the cultural, political, and legal representations of Mexican Americans and the development of US capitalism and nationhood. Beginning with the Mexican-American War of 1846-1848 and continuing through the period of mass repatriation of US Mexican laborers in 1939, Rivera examines both Mexican-American and Anglo-American cultural production in order to tease out the complexities of the so-called “Mexican question.” Using historical and archival materials, Rivera's wide-ranging objects of inquiry include fiction, non-fiction, essays, treaties, legal materials, political speeches, magazines, articles, cartoons, and advertisements created by both Mexicans and Anglo Americans. Engaging and methodologically venturesome, Rivera's study is a crucial contribution to Chicano/Latino Studies and fields of cultural studies, history, government, anthropology, and literary studies.

Barrio urbanism
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ISBN: 9786610281961 1135943206 1280281960 0203020960 9780203020968 9780415945417 0415945410 9780415945424 0415945429 6610281963 0415945410 0415945429 9781135943158 9781135943196 9781135943202 1135943192 9781280281969 Year: 2005 Publisher: New York Routledge

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Taking into account the author's consideration of this subject from a planning and urban policy perspective, this book charts the history of the largest ethnic population in America.


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Mexicans in the making of America
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ISBN: 0674744837 0674735676 9780674735675 9780674048485 0674048482 9780674975354 0674975359 Year: 2014 Publisher: Cambridge, MA : Harvard University Press,

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According to census projections, by 2050 nearly one in three U.S. residents will be Latino, and the overwhelming majority of these will be of Mexican descent. This dramatic demographic shift is reshaping politics, culture, and fundamental ideas about American identity. Neil Foley, a leading Mexican American historian, offers a sweeping view of the evolution of Mexican America, from a colonial outpost on Mexico’s northern frontier to a twenty-first-century people integral to the nation they have helped build. Mexicans have lived in and migrated to the American West and Southwest for centuries. When the United States annexed those territories following the Mexican-American War in 1848, the unequal destinies of the two nations were sealed. Despite their well-established presence in farm fields, workshops, and military service, Mexicans in America have long been regarded as aliens and outsiders. Xenophobic fantasies of a tidal wave of Mexicans overrunning the borders and transforming “real America” beyond recognition have inspired measures ranging from Operation Wetback in the 1950s to Arizona’s draconian SB 1070 anti-immigration law and the 700-mile security fence under construction along the U.S.-Mexican border today. Yet the cultural, linguistic, and economic ties that bind Mexico to the United States continue to grow. Mexicans in the Making of America demonstrates that America has always been a composite of racially blended peoples, never a purely white Anglo-Protestant nation. The struggle of Latinos to gain full citizenship bears witness to the continual remaking of American culture into something more democratic, egalitarian, and truer to its multiracial and multiethnic origins.

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