In this study, I examine Chicana/o writings and Black and Brown musical traditions as they entwine in urban centers and inform local visions of inclusion and models of social change. By analyzing literature and music from South Texas, Southern California, and Northeastern Michigan, I detail how the social particularities of each zone inform Chicana/o cultural productions rooted in the promise of empowerment and the possibility of cross-cultural solidarity. I assert that highlighting localized variations on these themes amplifies contrapuntal solidarities specific to each region, the relationship between different, locally conceived conceptions of Chicana/o identity, and the interplay between Brown and Black aesthetic practices in urban cent...
In the wake of an ever-expanding global network, attention is often focused on cultural intersection...
“Choreographing Borderlands: Chicanas/os, Dance, and the Performance of Identities” examines the une...
At a time of mass migration and growing xenophobia, what can we learn about the reception, incorpora...
This dissertation examines the diverse communities, contradictory identities, cross-cultural product...
textMore than a confined account of the musical activity of the Chicano Movement, my research consid...
Border Matters locates the study of Chicano culture in a broad social context. José Saldívar examine...
Drawing from anthropological fieldwork in three jazz clubs, this dissertation explores the global sc...
In this dissertation I argue that the integration and incorporation of Chicana/o cultural work into ...
As intolerance against Mexican Americans and Mexican migrants persists in the United States-- appare...
Mexican Ballads, Chicano Poems combines literary theory with the personal engagement of a prominent ...
This dissertation examines how Chicanx literature and art from the 1970s to the end of the twentieth...
2012-11-29This dissertation argues that for some Chicano and Chicana artists and activists living an...
This thesis explores Chicano involvement in and protest against the Vietnam war through a lens of cu...
In this study, I examine the jazz novel from a global perspective, following recent trends in musi...
In this thesis the author explores the notion that American Chicana/o literature serves as an intera...
In the wake of an ever-expanding global network, attention is often focused on cultural intersection...
“Choreographing Borderlands: Chicanas/os, Dance, and the Performance of Identities” examines the une...
At a time of mass migration and growing xenophobia, what can we learn about the reception, incorpora...
This dissertation examines the diverse communities, contradictory identities, cross-cultural product...
textMore than a confined account of the musical activity of the Chicano Movement, my research consid...
Border Matters locates the study of Chicano culture in a broad social context. José Saldívar examine...
Drawing from anthropological fieldwork in three jazz clubs, this dissertation explores the global sc...
In this dissertation I argue that the integration and incorporation of Chicana/o cultural work into ...
As intolerance against Mexican Americans and Mexican migrants persists in the United States-- appare...
Mexican Ballads, Chicano Poems combines literary theory with the personal engagement of a prominent ...
This dissertation examines how Chicanx literature and art from the 1970s to the end of the twentieth...
2012-11-29This dissertation argues that for some Chicano and Chicana artists and activists living an...
This thesis explores Chicano involvement in and protest against the Vietnam war through a lens of cu...
In this study, I examine the jazz novel from a global perspective, following recent trends in musi...
In this thesis the author explores the notion that American Chicana/o literature serves as an intera...
In the wake of an ever-expanding global network, attention is often focused on cultural intersection...
“Choreographing Borderlands: Chicanas/os, Dance, and the Performance of Identities” examines the une...
At a time of mass migration and growing xenophobia, what can we learn about the reception, incorpora...