Juan Flores makes an important contribution to the literature on the Puerto Rican experience with his new book, Divided Borders: Essays all Puerto Rican Identity. The essays are exemplary of a serious exploration of the Puerto Rican identity as it has been defined and portrayed by a variety of writers, popular movements, and social movements
Américo Paredes is a seminal figure in Mexican-American studies. Professor Emeritus of English and A...
This essay reviews the following works: The Strange Career of William Ellis: The Texas Slave Who Bec...
The editors of this book, associate professors at the University of Chicago, state that their work s...
Joseph Fitzpatrick\u27s second edition of Puerto Rican Americans returns to a form familiar to reade...
Puerto Ricans have been writing about their experiences in the mainland for a very long time. At the...
The author has written an excellent summary of the little known events in Filipino history in the Ph...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s Puerto Rican Chicago is a noteworthy contribution to the ever burgeoning liter...
Written reminiscences have taken the form of a literary subgenre and are very popular among Puerto R...
An analysis of the concept of Hispanic or Latino as a form of an ethnic conscious identity and behav...
It may be apocryphal by now, but it has often been said, and it is repeated again by Rodriguez in he...
This is an important book for many reasons. Much like Michael Omi and Howard Winants\u27 Racial Form...
This book is an unrevised third printing of eleven inspiring essays written by twelve social scienti...
Américo Paredes is a figure quite familiar to anyone who has delved even lightly and briefly into Ch...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s contribution to the growing body of literature on Latino/Hispanic identity in ...
Genaro Padilla and University of Wisconsin Press should be commended for the publication of a much n...
Américo Paredes is a seminal figure in Mexican-American studies. Professor Emeritus of English and A...
This essay reviews the following works: The Strange Career of William Ellis: The Texas Slave Who Bec...
The editors of this book, associate professors at the University of Chicago, state that their work s...
Joseph Fitzpatrick\u27s second edition of Puerto Rican Americans returns to a form familiar to reade...
Puerto Ricans have been writing about their experiences in the mainland for a very long time. At the...
The author has written an excellent summary of the little known events in Filipino history in the Ph...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s Puerto Rican Chicago is a noteworthy contribution to the ever burgeoning liter...
Written reminiscences have taken the form of a literary subgenre and are very popular among Puerto R...
An analysis of the concept of Hispanic or Latino as a form of an ethnic conscious identity and behav...
It may be apocryphal by now, but it has often been said, and it is repeated again by Rodriguez in he...
This is an important book for many reasons. Much like Michael Omi and Howard Winants\u27 Racial Form...
This book is an unrevised third printing of eleven inspiring essays written by twelve social scienti...
Américo Paredes is a figure quite familiar to anyone who has delved even lightly and briefly into Ch...
Felix M. Padilla\u27s contribution to the growing body of literature on Latino/Hispanic identity in ...
Genaro Padilla and University of Wisconsin Press should be commended for the publication of a much n...
Américo Paredes is a seminal figure in Mexican-American studies. Professor Emeritus of English and A...
This essay reviews the following works: The Strange Career of William Ellis: The Texas Slave Who Bec...
The editors of this book, associate professors at the University of Chicago, state that their work s...