No separate refuge : culture, class, and gender on an Anglo-Hispanic frontier in the American Southwest, 1880-1940
著者
書誌事項
No separate refuge : culture, class, and gender on an Anglo-Hispanic frontier in the American Southwest, 1880-1940
Oxford University Press, 1987
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliography
Includes index
内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
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ISBN 9780195044218
内容説明
This book is a discussion on the Chicano community in Colorado and New Mexico before World War II and it deals with such questions as economic exploitation and sustenance, Anglo-Mexican exchanges, family patterns, migration strategies in the context of historical change. The book focuses particularly on Mexican-American women and it revises many stereotypes about Mexican migration and Chicano culture. Readership: students of modern American history and society.
- 巻冊次
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: pbk ISBN 9780195060737
内容説明
Long after the Mexican-American War brought the Southwest under the United States flag, Anglos and Hispanics within the region continued to struggle for dominion. From the arrival of railroads through the height of the New Deal, Sarah Deutsch explores the cultural and economic strategies of Anglos and Hispanics as they competed for territory, resources, and power, and examines the impact this struggle had on Hispanic work, community, and gender patterns. Based on an award winning dissertation, this book analyzes the intersection of culture, class, and gender at disparate sites on the Anglo-Hispanic frontier-Hispanic villages, coal mining towns, and sugar beet districts in Colorado and New Mexico-showing that throughout the region there existed a vast network of migrants, linked by common experience and by kinship. Devoting particular attention to the role of women in cross-cultural interaction, No Separate Refuge brings to light 80 years of Southwestern history that saw Hispanic work transformed, community patterns shifted, and gender roles critically altered.
Drawing on personal interviews, school census and missionary records, private letters, and a wealth of other records, Deutsch traces developments from one state to the next, and from one decade to the next, providing an important contribution to the history of the Southwest, race relations, labor, agriculture, women, and Chicanos.
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