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DOCUMENT RESUME Chicano Studies Bibliography
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 119 923 ric 009 066 AUTHOR Marquez, Benjamin, Ed. TITLE Chicano Studies Bibliography: A Guide to the Resources of the Library at the University of Texas at El Paso, Fourth Edition. INSTITUTION Texas Univ., El Paso. PUB DATE 75 NOTE 138p.; For related document, see ED 081 524 AVAILABLE PROM Chicano Library Services, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, Texas 79902 ($3.00; 25% discount on 5 or more copies) EDRS PRICE MF-$0.83 HC-$7.35 Plus Postage DESCRIPTORS Audiovisual Aids; *Bibliographies; Books; Films; *library Collections; *Mexican Americans; Periodicals; *Reference Materials; *University Libraries IDENTIFIERS Chicanos; *University of Texas El Paso ABSTRACT Intended as a guide to select items, this bibliography cites approximately 668 books and periodical articles published between 1925 and 1975. Compiled to facilitate research in the field of Chicano Studies, the entries are part of the Chicano Materials Collection at the University of Texas at El Paso. Arranged alphabetically by the author's or editor's last name or by title when no author or editor is available, the entries include general bibliographic information and the call number for books and volume number and date for periodicals. Some entries also include a short abstract. Subject and title indices are provided. The bibliography also cites 14 Chicano magazines and newspapers, 27 audiovisual materials, 56 tape holdings, 10 researc°1 aids and services, and 22 Chicano bibliographies. (NQ) ******************************************14*************************** Documents acquired by ERIC include many informal unpublished * materials not available from other sources. ERIC makes every effort * * to obtain the best copy available. -
Copyright by Cary Cordova 2005
Copyright by Cary Cordova 2005 The Dissertation Committee for Cary Cordova Certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: THE HEART OF THE MISSION: LATINO ART AND IDENTITY IN SAN FRANCISCO Committee: Steven D. Hoelscher, Co-Supervisor Shelley Fisher Fishkin, Co-Supervisor Janet Davis David Montejano Deborah Paredez Shirley Thompson THE HEART OF THE MISSION: LATINO ART AND IDENTITY IN SAN FRANCISCO by Cary Cordova, B.A., M.A. Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin December, 2005 Dedication To my parents, Jennifer Feeley and Solomon Cordova, and to our beloved San Francisco family of “beatnik” and “avant-garde” friends, Nancy Eichler, Ed and Anna Everett, Ellen Kernigan, and José Ramón Lerma. Acknowledgements For as long as I can remember, my most meaningful encounters with history emerged from first-hand accounts – autobiographies, diaries, articles, oral histories, scratchy recordings, and scraps of paper. This dissertation is a product of my encounters with many people, who made history a constant presence in my life. I am grateful to an expansive community of people who have assisted me with this project. This dissertation would not have been possible without the many people who sat down with me for countless hours to record their oral histories: Cesar Ascarrunz, Francisco Camplis, Luis Cervantes, Susan Cervantes, Maruja Cid, Carlos Cordova, Daniel del Solar, Martha Estrella, Juan Fuentes, Rupert Garcia, Yolanda Garfias Woo, Amelia “Mia” Galaviz de Gonzalez, Juan Gonzales, José Ramón Lerma, Andres Lopez, Yolanda Lopez, Carlos Loarca, Alejandro Murguía, Michael Nolan, Patricia Rodriguez, Peter Rodriguez, Nina Serrano, and René Yañez. -
Los Siete De La Raza; Goodbye Mr
Marc1i1971 .,~ --c"'.- . Weatherman: Revised Forecast; Kopkind on Reich; Los Siete de la Raza; Goodbye Mr. Gomulka; Hollywood Capers 75c " .."1\ , -..,\ ~ .;' it,,'; ";~";~'f:',;~ ';C! -!!I . I j," ,!:;1 " ,;, I ": c . ~ . .aza T HE UPRISINGIN EASTLOS ANGELES last August, dur- B RODNIKWAS THE JUNIORin the plainclothes "Mis- ing which a cop killed journalist Ruben Salazar, sion Eleven" team. He and McGoran, his partner called national attention to the anger of chicanos of three years, reduced daylight burglaries in a in urban barrios. While the police riot and the death middle-class area near the Mission District by ask- of Salazar were making front pages, a less-publicized murder ing housewives to report all "suspicious persons" to police. trial in San Francisco was dramatizing the same chicano Known among their peers for "dedication," Brodnik and militancy and police brutality which clashed so violently in McGoran piled up over 400 burglary arrests and two dozen Los Angeles. bravery medals. The trial of Los Siete de la Raza-the young men who Like much of the Irish Catholic brass in the San Francisco became known as "the seven of the latin people"-was tak- Police Department, the two men had grown up in the Mis- ing place because for once the tables had been turned: in- sion District in the 1930s and '40s, when it contained pri- stead of cops gunning down brown people, as in Los An- marily Irish, Italian and German immigrants, most of them geles,a cop himself had been killed. As the defense attorneys unquestioning believers in the American myths of free enter- for Los Siete would point out, had the roles been reversed prise and social mobility. -
The Chicano Movement in Houston and Texas: a Personal Memory
The Chicano Movement in Houston and Texas: A Personal Memory by Carlos Calbillo c/s 116th Annual Meeting The four major themes of “Chicanismo” are generally considered to be: (1) the power of the March 1–3, 2012 creative earth and labor upon it; (2) political transformation through collective efforts; Become a TSHA (3) strong familial ties extending back into Mesoamerican pre-history; and (4) spiritually- Member and Omni Houston Hotel influenced creative artistic imagination as reflected in the visual ARTS. Receive FREE Keynote Address: Civil Rights in Texas ell, what a long and strange trip it was, or should I say, and white ministers, priests, a rabbi or two in attendance, I Whas been. Carlos Guerra is gone, Lupe Youngblood became curious to see if I could find any Latinos in the large Registration* by Darlene Clark Hine, Ph.D., Northwestern University is gone, Poncho Ruiz, El Tigre, Ernie Valdés. And Mateo crowd. To my surprise, I found only one, other than me. Vega, if not gone, is certainly missing in action or something I walked up to him after the march and introduced like that. These names are some of the brothers; there were myself to Leonel J. Castillo. He would eventually become also sisters that I worked with in the movement beginning the first Latino in Houston elected to city-wide office as city in, for me, April 1968. controller. Subsequently, he became the first Latino com- Sessions Speakers Exhibitors The Chicano movement of the 1960s and 1970s was es- missioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, sentially a grassroots community insurrection and rebellion appointed by President Jimmy Carter. -
Chicano Nationalism: the Brown Berets
CHICANO NATIONALISM: THE BROWN BERETS AND LEGAL SOCIAL CONTROL By JENNIFER G. CORREA Bachelor of Science in Criminology Texas A&M University Kingsville, TX 2004 Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE July 2006 CHICANO NATIONALISM: THE BROWN BERETS AND LEGAL SOCIAL CONTROL Thesis Approved: Dr. Thomas Shriver Thesis Adviser Dr. Gary Webb Dr. Stephen Perkins Dr. A. Gordon Emslie Dean of the Graduate College ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter Page I. INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................1 II. REVIEW OF LITERATURE ………………………………………………………7 Informants and Agent Provocateurs .........................................................................8 Surveillance, Dossiers, Mail Openings, and Surreptitious Entries ……………….14 Violent Strategies and Tactics ……………………………………………………20 III. METHOD OLOGY……………………………………………………………….29 Document Analysis ................................................................................................30 Telephone Interviews .............................................................................................32 Historical Analysis .................................................................................................34 IV. FINDINGS .............................................................................................................36 Mexican -American History ...................................................................................36 -
The Chicano Movement
The Chicano Movement By Fawn-Amber Montoya, Ph.D. The Chicano Movement represented Mexican Americans’ fight for equal rights after the Second World War. The rights that they desired included equality in education and housing, representation in voting, equal conditions in labor, and the recognition and celebration of their ethnic heritage. The Chicano Movement includes leaders such as Cesar Chavez, United Farm Workers (UFW) who worked to achieve better sanitation and wages for farm workers. Chavez advocated non violent action as the best method of achieving the goals of the UFW. He encouraged striking, boycotting, and marching as peaceful methods to achieve one’s goals. While the UFW was formed in California Chavez encouraged and participated in boycotts and strikes throughout the Southwestern United States. In New Mexico, Reyes Lopez Tijerina fought to regain lands that had been taken from Hispanics after the Mexican-American War. Tijerina believed that if the government and Anglo land owners failed to return lands unlawfully or unethically taken from Mexican Americans after the war in 1848, then Chicanos should use force. In Texas, Jose Angel Gutierrez assisted in the formation of La Raza Unida party which encouraged Mexican Americans to participate in voting, and to run for local, state, and national positions of leadership. La Raza Unida brought together Chicanos throughout the Southwest, but was most successful in Crystal City Texas, where the party was successful in electing local Chicanos to the school board. Rudulfo “Corky “ Gonzalez assisted in establishing the Crusade for Justice in Colorado. The Crusade aided high school and university students in gaining more representation at Colorado universities and establishing Chicano Studies courses and programs in high schools and universities. -
Hombres Y Mujeres Muralistas on a Mission: Painting Latino Identities in 1970S San Francisco
HOMBRES Y MUJERES MURALISTAS ON A MISSION: PAINTING LATINO IDENTITIES IN 1970S SAN FRANCISCO Cary Cordova American Studies, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA Abstract This article argues for the importance of murals as cultural texts, consciously formed to entertain, influence, and solidify local and transnational communities. In 1974, two teams of artists painted two legendary murals in San Francisco’s Mission District: In ‘‘Homage to Siqueı´ros,’’ the trio of male muralists presented themselves as heirs to famed Mexican muralists in order to solidify their indictment of conditions in the Americas and counter the participatory role of their patron, the Bank of America. In ‘‘Latino America,’’ the female muralists rejected the Chicano Movement’s emphasis on Mexican masters and declared a new feminist, collaborative iconography. Although the murals were dissimilar in terms of gender, approach, and aesthetics, the muralists were joined in their desire to unite the local Latino community through their depictions of a shared homeland, or an imagined Latin America. This article highlights the aesthetic, cultural, political, gendered, and regional dimensions of Latino identities through the lens of mural creation. Keywords community murals; pan-Latino identity; iconography; Mission District ‘‘An explosion of human colors’’: Murals in ascendance Since the late 1960s, cultural workers in San Francisco’s predominantly Latino Mission District have produced an impressive body of literary and artistic work. Their creative milieu was important in helping to mobilize the Chicano movement and spurring a Latino cultural renaissance of local and Latino Studies 2006, 4, (356–380) c 2006 Palgrave Macmillan Ltd 1476-3435/06 $30.00 www.palgrave-journals.com/lst Hombres y Mujeres Muralistas on a Mission ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Cary Cordova 357 national significance. -
November 1969 $'92 25~ Vol
IN THIS ISSUE -PRISON INTERVIEW WITH LOS SIETE -LIBERATION WOMEN'S UNION -IIC ACTION NOVEMBER 1969 $'92 25~ VOL. 5 NO. 10 -MUNIBLACKCAUCUS • THE MOVEMENT PRESS BULK FlATE 4.•. POSTAGE 330 Grove Street PAID Mr. & Mrs. Grant Cannon San Francisco, California 94102 Sail Franc:l_. Calif. 4907 Klatte Road P..-mlt No. Cincinnati,' Ohio 45244 TORTURE IN BRAZIL EDITORS NOTE: The following document was smug gled out of Brazil. The brother who sent it to us requested that we do "everything within our power to translate it and seek to have it pUblished broadly". OLEO STRUT IS RECRUITING Since he gave no address or suggestions on how we might help, we assume that we can best show our solidarity with our brothers and sisters struggling The Oleo strut is looking for new staff members. oppressive nature of the Army. against imperi.alism in Latin America by building The strut is a GI coffeehouse located in Killeen', The Oleo Strut staff is a collective. We live in one a front against imperialism inside the monster. Texas near Fort Hood. As well as the regular ac house and all work every day at the Strut. We have tivities of a GI coffee house, we hope to have a been working as a collective for 4 months and have been DOCUMENT NO, 1 radical bookstore, combination military law and varyingly successful. Within the collective is a wo radical books library in tIE near future. men's caucus. We discuss all problems and polit On (date, late 1969), two sisters ("A" and"B" , Killeen is a small town with a population of ical questions that arise. -
La Raza and the Onetime Voice of Chicano Activism
La Raza and the Onetime Voice of Chicano Activism February 6, 2019 By Nancy Kay Turner at the Autry Museum, Los Angeles (through February 10) Reviewed by Nancy Kay Turner You know something is happening but you don’t know what it is. Do you, Mr. Jones? –Bob Dylan, “Ballad Of A Thin Man” Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. –George Santayana The sixties was a tumultuous decade, filled with assassinations, race, student and antiwar riots. This traumatic and dangerous time, when the social fabric was being torn apart, also gave birth to many civil rights movements for marginalized people such as women, gay/lesbian/transgender and people of color. This exhibition at The Autry Museum focuses on the Chicano movement specifically and on La Raza, a newspaper/zine that was crucial to exposing, through text and image, the Chicano movements struggle for social justice from 1967-77. Recently, a treasure trove archive of 25,000 previously unseen photographs from La Raza have been donated to UCLA to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the magazine. As part of the Getty Museum’s extensive Pacific Standard Time LA/LA (Los Angeles/Latin America) series, this ambitious historical exhibition aims to elucidate the profound effect the magazine had on the community. “The editors of La Raza adopted a groundbreaking format in which photojournalism combined with art, satire, poetry and political commentary… (to) inspire the Chicano community to activism…” The curators have divided the exhibition into the following categories: “Place and Space,” “Portraits of the Community,” “Signs of the Times,” “The Body,” “The Other, The State” and “The Principals.” All of the images are film (no digital images, though the whole archive is being digitized for conservation) and in black and white. -
November 1969 $'92 25~ Vol
IN THIS ISSUE -PRISON INTERVIEW WITH LOS SIETE -LIBERATION WOMEN'S UNION -IIC ACTION NOVEMBER 1969 $'92 25~ VOL. 5 NO. 10 -MUNIBLACKCAUCUS • THE MOVEMENT PRESS BULK FlATE 4.•. POSTAGE 330 Grove Street PAID Mr. & Mrs. Grant Cannon San Francisco, California 94102 Sail Franc:l_. Calif. 4907 Klatte Road P..-mlt No. Cincinnati,' Ohio 45244 TORTURE IN BRAZIL EDITORS NOTE: The following document was smug gled out of Brazil. The brother who sent it to us requested that we do "everything within our power to translate it and seek to have it pUblished broadly". OLEO STRUT IS RECRUITING Since he gave no address or suggestions on how we might help, we assume that we can best show our solidarity with our brothers and sisters struggling The Oleo strut is looking for new staff members. oppressive nature of the Army. against imperi.alism in Latin America by building The strut is a GI coffeehouse located in Killeen', The Oleo Strut staff is a collective. We live in one a front against imperialism inside the monster. Texas near Fort Hood. As well as the regular ac house and all work every day at the Strut. We have tivities of a GI coffee house, we hope to have a been working as a collective for 4 months and have been DOCUMENT NO, 1 radical bookstore, combination military law and varyingly successful. Within the collective is a wo radical books library in tIE near future. men's caucus. We discuss all problems and polit On (date, late 1969), two sisters ("A" and"B" , Killeen is a small town with a population of ical questions that arise. -
Texto Completo (Pdf)
indexlcomunicación | nº 9 (3) 2019 | Páginas 165-183 E-ISSN: 2174-1859 | ISSN: 2444-3239 | Depósito Legal: M-19965-2015 Recibido el 29_08_2019 | Aceptado el 20_10_2019 | Publicado el 16_11_2019 REPRESENTACIÓN DE LA DIVERSIDAD FUNCIONAL EN SERIES CONTEMPORÁNEAS ESPAÑOLAS DE ‘PRIME TIME’ REPRESENTATION OF FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY IN CONTEMPORARY SPANISH TV SERIES ON PRIME TIME −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− Julia Palenzuela Zanca [email protected] https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1562-5700 María Marcos Ramos [email protected] https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3764-7177 Beatriz González de Garay Domínguez [email protected] https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0382-0640 Universidad de Salamanca −−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−−− Para citar este trabajo: Palenzuela Zanca, J., Marcos Ramos, M. y González de Garay Domínguez, B. (2019). Representación de la diversidad funcional en series contemporáneas españolas de ‘prime time’. index.comunicación, 9(3), 165-183. indexlcomunicación| número monográfico 9(3), 2019 Intersecciones televisivas Resumen: El siguiente estudio analiza el grado de representación y autonomía de los personajes con diversidad funcional en la ficción española en horario de prime time durante la segunda mitad del año 2016, el año 2017 y la primera mitad del año 2018. Para ello, han sido analizados 1.237 personajes de 47 series de ficción, emitidas en las seis cadenas generalistas nacionales: La 1, La 2, Antena 3, Cuatro, Telecinco y La Sexta. Por medio de un método validado por estudios previos, se ha llegado a la conclusión de que existe una infrarrepresentación de 8,6 puntos porcentuales por parte de la ficción española de personajes con diversidad funcional en comparación con la realidad, no siendo apenas mostrada su autonomía como individuos, tanto en el ámbito de las actividades cotidianas, como en el hecho de protagonizar las narraciones en las que aparecen. -
Leg Council to Settle on La Raza and MECHA
S.B. County sues state for I.V. riots By MIKE PASENI Santa Barbara County has initiated a class action, suit on behalf of the county tax payers against the state for damages suffered in the Isla Vista riots of 1970. Donald Vickers of the County Counsel Office said the suit is based on two points: first, under state statutes the state should reimburse the county for extraordinary expenses, which would include the overtime payments of the County Sheriffs Department and equipment damage; second, the county maintains that the suppression of riots is a matter of statewide concern and therefore it is a violation of equal protection laws to burden the tax payers of this county alone with the costs incurred by the riots. Also playing a part are the facts that the riot started on the UCSB campus, which is state property, then spilled over onto county property and that the county insurance carrier will not cover the claims against the county for police brutality and other abuse. The county is calling for a reimbursement of approximately $1.5 million with the provision that this figure may be adjusted upon the attainment of more information. Should this amount be awarded to the county, it will produce indirect benefits to the tax payers, as the costs have already been paid for in county funds. If reimbursement is not granted, it will be county tax payers who pick up the tab for suppressing the Isla Vista riots. The action was filed in Los Angeles Superior Court specifically against the state, Governor Reagan and State Finance Director Vern Orr.