In Defense of My People: Alonso S. Perales and the Development of Mexican-American Public Intellectuals ed. by Michael A. Olivas (original) (raw)
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Re-envisioning the Mexican American Experience in World War II
Traditional U.S. historical scholars, as a matter of practice, carelessly push the history of the Mexican American community to the fringes of the collective historical consciousness of this country by selecting the common stories that students of all races learn. This study examines the problem of insufficient and inadequate historical scholarship pertaining to people of Mexican ancestry of the United States. By providing a local history of Mexican Americans in the Sacramento Valley this project provides a challenge to the legacy of historical exclusion by documenting the contributions and experiences of the Mexican American World War II generation and provides an alternative historical perspective to the World War II narrative. like to acknowledge them for their support; first and foremost I would like to thank all of the Mexican Americans of the World War II generation. This project is a tribute to the resolve, the dedication and the manner in which you have lived and continue to live your lives. To all of the participants in this project, especially the entire Unzueta familia: Petra, Cesario, Miguel and Robert, this project would not have happened without your support and willingness to share your stories. To Dr. Gregorio Mora Torres for his meticulous critiques and steadfast intellectual direction, thank you profe. To Dr. Julia Curry Rodríguez for her motivation, inspiration and unwavering support. ¡Muchisimas gracias profa! To XGC de San José, thank you for providing community and support, keep inspiring the next generation of Chicana and Chicano scholars. Lastly, a big thank you to the Mercado and Gutierrez families, they have provided significant support and inspiration for this work, probably more than they will ever know. This project is dedicated to the three beautiful, courageous and inspiring Chicanas: Eliza, Yolotli & Neca. I love you very much! VII TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION
Una Guerra Contra La Mujer: Chicana Feminism and Vietnam War Protest
AWE (A Woman’s Experience), 2016
The 1960’s in the United States is known for its many social movements, especially for women and ethnic minorities. One movement of this period that deserves more study is Chicana women who were active in Vietnam antiwar efforts. This paper uses a wide variety of sources, including The Gloria Arellanes Papers, a collection of sources from California State University’s Special Collections which includes the letter of resignation from all the women of the Brown Berets. It also includes notes from the Chicano Moratorium Committee which outlined the ideas of what can be done to end the draft for the Vietnam War, as well as a collection of poems, articles, essays, and photographs from the newspaper for Las Adelitas de Aztlán called Las Hijas de Cuahtemoc, which call for sisterhood, focus on the specific goals for the Chicana, and condemn the Vietnam war which not only had a high casualty rate of Chicanos, was a distraction from domestic issues affecting Chicano/as, and the beginning of Chicana Feminism as a movement within a movement with the dual goal to further La Raza and extinguish patriarchy.
Traditional U.S. historical scholars, as a matter of practice, carelessly push the history of the Mexican American community to the fringes of the collective historical consciousness of this country by selecting the common stories that students of all races learn. This study examines the problem of insufficient and inadequate historical scholarship pertaining to people of Mexican ancestry of the United States. By providing a local history of Mexican Americans in the Sacramento Valley this project provides a challenge to the legacy of historical exclusion by documenting the contributions and experiences of the Mexican American World War II generation and provides an alternative historical perspective to the World War II narrative.
Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014, 246 pp., $45.00, hardcover Reviewed by Catia Cecilia Confortini Women's Review of Books (July 2015) FINAL DRAFT Focusing on the period between the two world wars, Megan Threlkeld, in her new book Pan American Women, examines the efforts of US women's organizations to promote western hemispheric cooperation by developing relationships with Mexican women's groups. The work
World War II and Mexican American Civil Rights
Latino Studies, 2010
The story of Mexican American civil rights post World War II (WWII) is an integral part of any Chicano studies class-woven into the larger study of Mexican American history. But outside the Chicano or Latino Studies classes, Mexican American civil rights are rarely acknowledged, not even whispered about, either in mainstream college history classrooms or in high school or middle school. It is fair to say that most Americans regard civil rights solely as an African-American phenomenon. This volume underscores that, in fact, Mexican American civil rights advancement owes its greatest debt to the changes wrought as a result of WWII. Latino scholars have repeatedly pointed to WWII as a period that led to the greatest advancements for Mexican Americans, not as the beginning of civil rights efforts, but as a pivotal point within those efforts. For example,