Barrios Norteños: St. Paul and Midwestern Mexican Communities in the Twentieth Century

Přední strana obálky
University of Texas Press, 2000 - Počet stran: 380

Mexican communities in the Midwestern United States have a history that extends back to the turn of the twentieth century, when a demand for workers in several mass industries brought Mexican agricultural laborers to jobs and homes in the cities. This book offers a comprehensive social, labor, and cultural history of these workers and their descendants, using the Mexican barrio of "San Pablo" (St. Paul) Minnesota as a window on the region.

Through extensive archival research and numerous interviews, Dennis Valdés explores how Mexicans created ethnic spaces in Midwestern cities and how their lives and communities have changed over the course of the twentieth century. He examines the process of community building before World War II, the assimilation of Mexicans into the industrial working class after the war, the Chicano Movement of the 1960s and 1970s, and more recent changes resulting from industrial restructuring and unprecedented migration and population growth. Throughout, Valdés pays particular attention to Midwestern Mexicans' experiences of inequality and struggles against domination and compares them to Mexicans' experiences in other regions of the U.S.

 

Obsah

Introduction
1
Chapter 1 Mexican Inequality and the Midwest
6
Chapter 2 Reckoning with Winter
22
Chapter 3 Memory of Hunger
87
Chapter 4 Good Solid Workers
129
Becoming a Little More Militant
178
Chapter 6 Completing a Circle
213
Retrospective
271
Notes
279
Bibliography
313
Index
361
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