Genaro Padilla and University of Wisconsin Press should be commended for the publication of a much needed addition to the study of American autobiography, in general, and ethnic autobiography, in particular. Early Mexican American autobiographies remain largely ignored and forgotten. The importance of these autobiographies should not be ignored, however, especially with regard to the study of the West and Southwest. With this book, Padilla opens the door to the retrieval and study of these important historical documents
De León\u27s pioneering effort is a most welcome volume to Chicano Studies. The historian\u27s findi...
Arnoldo De Leon wrote this book to fill a gap in the existing literature on the American West that e...
Review of: Immigrant Minds, American Identities: Making the United States Home, 1870-1930. Overland,...
Genaro Padilla and University of Wisconsin Press should be commended for the publication of a much n...
Américo Paredes is a figure quite familiar to anyone who has delved even lightly and briefly into Ch...
Montejano presents an organized historical perspective of Anglos and Mexicans in the making of Texas...
Mexican-Americans comprise the second largest minority group in the United States and one of the mos...
As a Mexican American academic, I found that this study hits home. Professor Chew Sanchez\u27s book ...
Américo Paredes is a seminal figure in Mexican-American studies. Professor Emeritus of English and A...
An analysis of the concept of Hispanic or Latino as a form of an ethnic conscious identity and behav...
Biographies of thirteen major activists of the Mexican American generation, which is defined as “bou...
The demographic changes affecting America\u27s ethnic populations are a reminder that history is in ...
In this book Lawrence A. Cardoso focuses attention on the flow of unskilled, low-paid Mexican worker...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s contribution to the growing body of literature on Latino/Hispanic identity in ...
Review of: Barrios Norteños: St. Paul and Midwestern Mexican Communities in the Twentieth Century. V...
De León\u27s pioneering effort is a most welcome volume to Chicano Studies. The historian\u27s findi...
Arnoldo De Leon wrote this book to fill a gap in the existing literature on the American West that e...
Review of: Immigrant Minds, American Identities: Making the United States Home, 1870-1930. Overland,...
Genaro Padilla and University of Wisconsin Press should be commended for the publication of a much n...
Américo Paredes is a figure quite familiar to anyone who has delved even lightly and briefly into Ch...
Montejano presents an organized historical perspective of Anglos and Mexicans in the making of Texas...
Mexican-Americans comprise the second largest minority group in the United States and one of the mos...
As a Mexican American academic, I found that this study hits home. Professor Chew Sanchez\u27s book ...
Américo Paredes is a seminal figure in Mexican-American studies. Professor Emeritus of English and A...
An analysis of the concept of Hispanic or Latino as a form of an ethnic conscious identity and behav...
Biographies of thirteen major activists of the Mexican American generation, which is defined as “bou...
The demographic changes affecting America\u27s ethnic populations are a reminder that history is in ...
In this book Lawrence A. Cardoso focuses attention on the flow of unskilled, low-paid Mexican worker...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s contribution to the growing body of literature on Latino/Hispanic identity in ...
Review of: Barrios Norteños: St. Paul and Midwestern Mexican Communities in the Twentieth Century. V...
De León\u27s pioneering effort is a most welcome volume to Chicano Studies. The historian\u27s findi...
Arnoldo De Leon wrote this book to fill a gap in the existing literature on the American West that e...
Review of: Immigrant Minds, American Identities: Making the United States Home, 1870-1930. Overland,...