Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, members of the Chicana/o Movement reached across class, borders, and ideologies to proclaim a political solidarity with the Mexican Left. Both, Chicana/os and Mexican activists expressed a narrative of political solidarity that encompassed a perceived shared experience of oppression and struggles for liberation. I contend, however, that both groups saw the source of their oppression and forms of resistance through different lenses. Chicana/o activists identified racism, discrimination, and cultural erasure with oppression, and they retrofit Mexican nationalism with political radicalism. In contrast, Mexican activists celebrated Marxist ideologies as radical political resistance against an increasing authorita...
Resistance and the construction of concrete alternatives to the dominant model go far beyond the few...
The tumultuous period of the 1960s reflect an era of change and renegotiation of the power dynamics ...
This study investigates the ways Tejana feminists in Austin, Houston, and San Antonio, Texas straddl...
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, members of the Chicana/o Movement reached across class, borders, and...
My dissertation analyzes the nature of the transnational solidarity movements established between Ch...
¡Grito!: Cultural Nationalism and the Chicana/o Insurgency in New Mexico, 1968-1978, is one of the f...
The period between 1965 and 1985 saw the use of several strike actions in San Diego in addition to d...
Traces the history of two organizations of the 1970s Chicano Movement: the Committee to Free Los Tre...
This work is intended to provide a synthesis on the development of a political ethos among Mexican A...
<p>What happens when the dominant binary categories used to describe American race relations--either...
“Bordering on Solidarity: Organizing Mexican and Mexican American Workers in the U.S. Mexico Borderl...
Qualitative research in Tucson, Arizona reveals limitations to coalition building based on activists...
The posters analyzed in this project map out a Chicana/o-Central American solidarity nexus with impo...
In the last fifteen years Latin America has been the scene of very different kinds of resistance and...
UnrestrictedThis dissertation is a study of Chicana and Chicano student activists’ sense of communit...
Resistance and the construction of concrete alternatives to the dominant model go far beyond the few...
The tumultuous period of the 1960s reflect an era of change and renegotiation of the power dynamics ...
This study investigates the ways Tejana feminists in Austin, Houston, and San Antonio, Texas straddl...
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, members of the Chicana/o Movement reached across class, borders, and...
My dissertation analyzes the nature of the transnational solidarity movements established between Ch...
¡Grito!: Cultural Nationalism and the Chicana/o Insurgency in New Mexico, 1968-1978, is one of the f...
The period between 1965 and 1985 saw the use of several strike actions in San Diego in addition to d...
Traces the history of two organizations of the 1970s Chicano Movement: the Committee to Free Los Tre...
This work is intended to provide a synthesis on the development of a political ethos among Mexican A...
<p>What happens when the dominant binary categories used to describe American race relations--either...
“Bordering on Solidarity: Organizing Mexican and Mexican American Workers in the U.S. Mexico Borderl...
Qualitative research in Tucson, Arizona reveals limitations to coalition building based on activists...
The posters analyzed in this project map out a Chicana/o-Central American solidarity nexus with impo...
In the last fifteen years Latin America has been the scene of very different kinds of resistance and...
UnrestrictedThis dissertation is a study of Chicana and Chicano student activists’ sense of communit...
Resistance and the construction of concrete alternatives to the dominant model go far beyond the few...
The tumultuous period of the 1960s reflect an era of change and renegotiation of the power dynamics ...
This study investigates the ways Tejana feminists in Austin, Houston, and San Antonio, Texas straddl...