Fr. 70.00

North from Mexico - The Spanish-Speaking People of the United States

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This single-volume book provides students, educators, and politicians with an update to the classic Carey McWilliams work North From Mexico. It provides up-to-date information on the Chicano experience and the emergent social dynamics in the United States as a result of Mexican immigration.

Carey McWilliam's North From Mexico, first published in 1948, is a classic survey of Chicano history. Now fully updated by Alma M. García to cover the period from 1990 to the present, McWilliams's quintessential book explores all aspects of Chicano/a experiences in the United States, including employment, family, immigration policy, language issues, and other cultural, political, and social issues. The volume builds on the landmark work and also provides relevant up-to-date content to the 1990 edition revised by Matt S. Meier, which added coverage of the key period in Chicano history from the postwar period through to the late 1980s.

As the largest group of immigrants in the United States, representing more than a quarter of foreign-born individuals in the United States, Mexican immigrants have had and will continue to have a tremendous impact on the culture and society of the United States as a whole. This freshly updated edition of North from Mexico addresses the changing demographic trends within Mexican immigrant communities and their implications for the country; analyzes key immigration policies such as the Immigration Act of 1990 and California's Proposition 187, with specific emphasis on the political mobilization that has developed within Mexican American immigrant communities; and describes the development of immigration reform as well as community organizations and electoral politics.

The book contains new chapters that examine recent trends in Mexican immigration to the United States and identify the impact on politics and society of Mexican immigrants and later generations of U.S.-born Mexican Americans. The appendices provide readers and researchers with current immigration figures and information regarding today's socieconomic conditions for Mexican Americans.

About the author

MATT S. MEIER is the Patrick A. Donohoe Professor in the Department of History at Santa Clara University.
ALMA M. GARCIA is a Professor of Sociology at Santa Clara University, California. She specializes in Mexican American Studies, Gender Studies, and the political economy of Latin America. Garcia grew up in El Paso, Texas, the daughter of a Mexican immigrant father and a second-generation Mexican American mother.

Product details

Authors Alma Garcia, Alma M. García, Carey McWilliams, Matt Meier, Meier Matt S.
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 25.04.2016
 
EAN 9781440849855
ISBN 978-1-4408-4985-5
No. of pages 480
Dimensions 156 mm x 234 mm x 26 mm
Weight 726 g
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories

History, HISTORY / Latin America / Mexico, ART / History / European / Romanticism

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