The editor indicated in his foreword that he had several purposes for collecting and assembling the sixty-four stories that comprise this book. First, he had noted that little had been written concerning the history of the Rio Puerco region of New Mexico, and the little that had been written had not included the actual first person narratives of the people who had lived there. These, the collector believed, the ... vibrant oral history and literature from a previously unrecorded area can now further enrich the age old cultural heritage of Hispanic New Mexico
Books reviewed: Zazan Tleino: Adivinanzas Nahuas de Ayer, Hoy y Siempre; La mujer que brillaba aun m...
The first volume of a trilogy by the Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano, Memory of Fire: Genesis has b...
The remarkable descriptions of places and people produced by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado\u27s expe...
Américo Paredes is a figure quite familiar to anyone who has delved even lightly and briefly into Ch...
Rview of Cahill, Danielle and Sandra de los Rios. Vistas Comerciales Y Culturales. Boston, MA: Heinl...
Review of Garcia, Carmen and Emily Spinelli. Mejor Dicho. Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath and Company, 199...
The works included in this anthology, many of them previously printed, reflect six characteristic th...
As one drives through the state of California, the legacy of Indian, Spanish, and Mexican cultures i...
Sabine R. Ulibarrí is a prolific and engaging story teller whose works portray the people, the lands...
Montejano presents an organized historical perspective of Anglos and Mexicans in the making of Texas...
Mario T. Garcia\u27s Desert Immigrants documents and analyzes the growth of the border city of El Pa...
Mexican-Americans comprise the second largest minority group in the United States and one of the mos...
The major weakness of this text is that it is a reprint of a 1979 special edition of Revista Chicano...
THE SPANISH FRONTIER IN NORTH AMERICA, by David J. Weber, reviewed by Jerald T. Milanich; THE PEOPLE...
On the surface, People of Pascua appears to be a focused anthropological field study limited to a na...
Books reviewed: Zazan Tleino: Adivinanzas Nahuas de Ayer, Hoy y Siempre; La mujer que brillaba aun m...
The first volume of a trilogy by the Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano, Memory of Fire: Genesis has b...
The remarkable descriptions of places and people produced by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado\u27s expe...
Américo Paredes is a figure quite familiar to anyone who has delved even lightly and briefly into Ch...
Rview of Cahill, Danielle and Sandra de los Rios. Vistas Comerciales Y Culturales. Boston, MA: Heinl...
Review of Garcia, Carmen and Emily Spinelli. Mejor Dicho. Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath and Company, 199...
The works included in this anthology, many of them previously printed, reflect six characteristic th...
As one drives through the state of California, the legacy of Indian, Spanish, and Mexican cultures i...
Sabine R. Ulibarrí is a prolific and engaging story teller whose works portray the people, the lands...
Montejano presents an organized historical perspective of Anglos and Mexicans in the making of Texas...
Mario T. Garcia\u27s Desert Immigrants documents and analyzes the growth of the border city of El Pa...
Mexican-Americans comprise the second largest minority group in the United States and one of the mos...
The major weakness of this text is that it is a reprint of a 1979 special edition of Revista Chicano...
THE SPANISH FRONTIER IN NORTH AMERICA, by David J. Weber, reviewed by Jerald T. Milanich; THE PEOPLE...
On the surface, People of Pascua appears to be a focused anthropological field study limited to a na...
Books reviewed: Zazan Tleino: Adivinanzas Nahuas de Ayer, Hoy y Siempre; La mujer que brillaba aun m...
The first volume of a trilogy by the Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano, Memory of Fire: Genesis has b...
The remarkable descriptions of places and people produced by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado\u27s expe...