¡Grito!: Cultural Nationalism and the Chicana/o Insurgency in New Mexico, 1968-1978, is one of the first to examine the development of Chicana/o movement practices in the Land of Enchantment. While others have cast the Chicana/o movements criticisms and actions against federal, state, and local governments as a struggle to gain greater rights for Mexican Americans, I argue that the insurgency was not exclusively a strategy of resistance to subjugation. Instead, I believe the Chicana/o movement was a conversation that activists attempted to have with their own communities to convince ethnic Mexicans to think about themselves in profoundly new ways. Focusing on four prominent organizations in various parts of the stateEl Grito del Norte (an a...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013As one of the formative organizations of the Chicana/o...
In this study, I explore the national project of the government born from the Mexican Revolution of ...
Indigenous social movements in the Americas have multiple sources, but in regards to Mexican America...
My dissertation analyzes the nature of the transnational solidarity movements established between Ch...
The recovery of a movement is explored in this project inspired by the New Mexico Highlands Universi...
This work is intended to provide a synthesis on the development of a political ethos among Mexican A...
In the United States in the mid-1960's, Chicano cultural nationalists mobilized a generation by recu...
This project investigates and critically engages the legacies of mestizaje within Chicana/o identity...
From the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s, people of Mexican descent mobilized in pursuit for civil rights...
¡Mi Raza Primero! is the first book to examine the Chicano movement's development in one locale - in...
The Hispanic population is rapidly increasing. The U. S. 2000 Census reports that the Hispanic popul...
Do you want to know more about the social movements of the Latinx community? If you answer is yes, t...
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, members of the Chicana/o Movement reached across class, borders, and...
This study explores the idea of Mexican-American indigenous identity, or indigeneity. I argue that m...
Representations of indigeneity abound in late-twentieth-century Chicano/a cultural productions, occu...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013As one of the formative organizations of the Chicana/o...
In this study, I explore the national project of the government born from the Mexican Revolution of ...
Indigenous social movements in the Americas have multiple sources, but in regards to Mexican America...
My dissertation analyzes the nature of the transnational solidarity movements established between Ch...
The recovery of a movement is explored in this project inspired by the New Mexico Highlands Universi...
This work is intended to provide a synthesis on the development of a political ethos among Mexican A...
In the United States in the mid-1960's, Chicano cultural nationalists mobilized a generation by recu...
This project investigates and critically engages the legacies of mestizaje within Chicana/o identity...
From the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s, people of Mexican descent mobilized in pursuit for civil rights...
¡Mi Raza Primero! is the first book to examine the Chicano movement's development in one locale - in...
The Hispanic population is rapidly increasing. The U. S. 2000 Census reports that the Hispanic popul...
Do you want to know more about the social movements of the Latinx community? If you answer is yes, t...
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, members of the Chicana/o Movement reached across class, borders, and...
This study explores the idea of Mexican-American indigenous identity, or indigeneity. I argue that m...
Representations of indigeneity abound in late-twentieth-century Chicano/a cultural productions, occu...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013As one of the formative organizations of the Chicana/o...
In this study, I explore the national project of the government born from the Mexican Revolution of ...
Indigenous social movements in the Americas have multiple sources, but in regards to Mexican America...