Dominican Studies: Resources and Research Questions

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Dominican Studies: Resources and Research Questions City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Publications and Research CUNY Dominican Studies Institute 1997 Dominican Studies: Resources and Research Questions Luis Alvarez-López Sherrie Baver Jean Weisman Ramona Hernández Nancy López How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/dsi_pubs/10 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] Dominican Studies: Resources and Research Questions Luis Alwrcz-Lopcz SJicnic Baver Jean Wcisman Ramona Heniaiidez & Nancy Lopez Dominican Research Monographs T h e C u n y Dominican Studies Institute D o m in ic a n S t u d ie s : Resources and Research Questions A Selected Bibliography Luis Alvarez-Lopez On Studying Women and Work in the Dominican Republic: A Bibliographic Orientation Sherrie L Baver Gender and Class Consciousness: Women in the Dominican Republic Jean Weisman Yola and Gender: Dominican Women's Unregulated Migration Ramona Hernandez and Nancy Lopez Dominican Research Monographs The CUNY Dominican Studies Instihite Dominican Research Monographs Copyright © 1997 The CUNY Dominican Studies histitute Dominican Research Monographs, a publication of the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute, appearing roughly every three months, seeks to dis­ seminate knowledge on the Dominican experience in the United States, the Dominican Republic, and elsewhere. Generally, the texts published in the series will have been generated by research projects sponsored by the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute. Publications Coordinator Jermifer Radtke Credits: This publication has been made possible in part by the support of the Chancellor's Office and Organized Research, the City University of New York. The CUNY Dominican Studies Institute at City College is an organized research imit of the City University of New York approved by the Board of Trustees of the University on February 22, 1994. The Institute's pri­ mary mission is the production and dissemination of knowledge on the Dominican experience. City College, Hostos Community College, and the central administration of CUNY, with the support of the Dominican community in New York, have led the effort that created the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute. For information on the series or on the overall research agenda of the Institute, you may reach us at: The CUNY Dominican Studies Institute The City College of New York North Academic Center, Room 4-107 New York, NY 10031 Telephone: (212) 650-7496 Fax: (212)650-7489 e-mail: [email protected] Foreword In the Summer of 1993, the CuNY Dominican Studies Institute, then a pilot project, began implementing its research agenda, having already achieved a measure of visibility through conferences and other public events. The first volume in this Dominican Research Monographs series, Jorge Duany's Quisqueya on the Hudson: The Transnational Identity of Dominicans in Washington Heights, came out of that incipient effort. The pub­ lication of the present Dominican Studies: Resources and Research Questions by Luis Alvarez-Lopez, Sherrie Baver, Jean Weisman, Ramona Hernandez, and Nancy Lopez, brings closure to the Dominican Institute's research initiatives during our first year. Unlike the previous volumes in this series, Dominican Studies: Resources and Research Questions is an assorted publica­ tion, gathering together the results of four independent research projects. Alvarez-Lopez set out to compile a modest Dominican studies bibliography for use by students working in various aca­ demic disciplines. He drew his selection from titles available in New York libraries. Baver and Weisman prepared their separate reports on the basis of their contacts with women's centers and organizations in the Dominican Republic. They traveled to Santo Domingo to complete their projects in the Summer of 1993. Finally, the text authored by Ramona Hernandez and Nancy Lopez grew out of their field study that same year of a Dominican town known to be a frequent point of departure for many imdocumented migrants aiming for Puerto Rico and the mainland United States. They highlight the daring participation of women in the migratory process. On the whole, Dominican Studies: Resources and Research Questions provides valuable information about resources and points to meaningful research questions that await in-depth treatment by scholars of the Dominican experience. Silvio Torres-Saillant Director CuNY Dominican Studies Institute Biographies Luis Alvarez-L6pez, PhD in History from New York University, currently teaches at Borough of Manhattan Commtmity College and Hostos Community College and serves as labor organizer for Hospital Workers' Union 1199. His publications include the books Domimcidn colonial y guerra popular: 1861-1865 and arti­ cles in Nacla Report on the Americas, Revista de Antro- pologta e Historia, Nuevo Humanismo, and Eme-Eme. S h e r r ie L. B a y er, Department of Latin American and Hispanic Caribbean Studies at the City College of the City University of New York, is author of The Political Economy of Colonialism: The State and Industrialization in Puerto Rico (1993) and co-editor of Latinos in New York: Communities in Transition (1996). Jean Weisman, Administrative Coordinator of the City College Center for Worker Education, has organized several student and faculty research trips to the Dominican Republic and Cuba. She is a member of the Advisory Board of the C u n y Dominican Studies Institute, the Executive Committee of the C u n y - Caribbean Exchange Program, and L a sa 's Task Force on Scholarly Relations with Cuba. Ramona Hernandez is an Assistant Professor in the Latino Studies Program at the University of Massachu­ setts at Boston and serves as a researcher with the C u n y Dominican Studies Institute. Co-author of Dominican New Yorkers: A Socioeconomic Profile (1995) and co-editor of Punto 7 Review: A Journal of Marginal Discourse, she has written widely on Dominican migration to the United States. Nancy L6pez, a doctoral candidate in the Sociology Department at the Graduate School and University Center, City University of New York, has taught at LaGuardia Commxmity College and the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CuNY. She has published in Phoebe: Journal of Feminist Scholarship, Theory, and Aesthetics. Table of Contents A Selected Bibliography Luis Alvarez-Lopez........................................................1 On Studying Women and Work: A Bibliographic Orientation Sherrie L Baver..........................................................33 Gender and Class Consciousness; Women in the Dominican Republic Jean W eism an............................................................ 41 Yola and Gender: Dominican Women's Unregulated Migration Ramona Hernandez and Nancy Ldpez..................... 57 A S elected B ibliography by Luis Alvarez-Lopez Nota Introductoria Fuentes y Perspectiva de Investigacion La presente compilacidn hibliogrdfica representa un esfuerzo del Instituto de Estudios Dominicanos por ofrecer al estudianta- do de CuNY asi como al profesorado y al publico en general un muestreo bdsico de la creciente produccion bibliogrdfica sobre los dominicanos en general. Para esta compilacidn fueron consul- tadas varias bibliotecas publicas y privadas de Nueva York, entre las quefiguran las bibliotecas del Centro Graduado de C u m , de City College, de Columbia University y la Biblioteca Publica de Nueva York. La pesquiza, en principio, cubrio el Comprehensive Dissertation Index, desde 1861 hasta 1992, publicado por University Microfilms International, en Ann Arbor, Michigan, asi como algunos articulos especializados sobre disertaciones doc- torales y tesis de maestria acerca de Latinoamerica y el Caribe. Ademds, se consulto algunas de las publicaciones mas impor- tantes sobre dicha region, tales como Hispanic American Historical Review, Latin American Perspective, Caribbean Studies, International Migration Review y el Journal of Latin American Studies. Sobre las relaciones entre la Republica Dominicana y los Estados Unidos existen varias fuentes primarias de informacidn de suma importancia para los estudiosos del tema. Muchas de estas fuentes forman parte de las Colecciones Presidenciales de Lyndon B. Johnson en Texas, y John E Kennedy en Massa- chussetts. Ademds de los papeles presidenciales existen los docu- mentos del Consejo Nacional de Seguridad, organismo asesor del Presidente de los Estados Unidos, los que constituyen fuentes primarias de gran valor historico. Igualmente utiles son los do- 1 cumentos desclasificados del gobierno de los Estados Unidos, los cuales, publicados bajo el tUulo de Declassified Documents por Research Publications International, estdn a disposicion del publico en general en la Biblioteca Publica de Nueva York. Una gran parte de lasfuentes primarias relativas a las relaciones entre la Republica Dominicana y los Estados Unidos ya ha sido con- sultada por investigadores dominicanos tales como Bernardo Vega, Victor Grimaldi y Luis Alvarez-Ldpez, entre otros. Estamos satisfechos de que investigaciones iniciales sobre el desarrollo politico y cultural, los patrones de asentamiento dominicano en los Estados Unidos, la experiencia femenina en el marco de la emigracidn, la relacion hombre-mujer, la produccidn artistica y literaria de los dominicanos inmigrantes y otros topi- cos dentro del contexto de la migratoria en los Estados Unidos pueden abordarse
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