Redeeming La Raza

Redeeming La Raza

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Summary

The economic modernization of the American Southwest and Mexico transformed the lives of ethnic Mexicans, subjecting them to economic exploitation and racism. Redeeming La Raza analyzes how political activists, using multiple strategies, challenged white supremacy, seeking to instill in ethnic Mexicans a sense of ethnic pride and unity.

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Redeeming La Raza by Gabriela Gonzlez

The economic modernization of the American Southwest and Mexico transformed the lives of ethnic Mexicans, subjecting them to economic exploitation and racism. Redeeming La Raza analyzes how political activists, using multiple strategies, challenged white supremacy, seeking to instill in ethnic Mexicans a sense of ethnic pride and unity.
Provocative and original..This study breaks new ground in its deeply sympathetic treatment of middle-class and more elite women, most of whom have been overshadowed by their male counterparts, or too readily dismissed as naively assimilationist or even outright racist. The research base is impressive, primarily consisting of oral histories (some of her own creation), personal correspondence, newspapers, and organizational records and newsletters. * Benjamin H. Johnson, Pacific Historical Review *
Gabriela González offers a rich and luminous study of transborder activism during the early twentieth century to examine how racial, gendered, and classed forms of oppression were challenged in the border regions of Texas....A notable strength of this text is its robust engagement with emerging forms of feminism in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands....Reedeming la Raza is a salutary contribution to the fields of gender studies, Mexican American history, border studies, and ethnic studies. The text is written in a lucid and accessible manner, making it an excellent addition to graduate and advanced undergraduate syllabi. Lastly, scholars will find an excellent resource in this text for attending to la raza without employing essentialist discourse. * Ruben Ernesto Zecena, Journal of Arizona History *
This important book explores the transborder history of Mexican-U.S. relations in the early twentieth century....González offers a major revision of such stereotypes...of....Mexican Americans...as victims compelled by Anglo racism to live in poverty and relegated to low-paying jobs....She profiles the experiences of gente decente, middle-class families who actively opposed the Porfiriato (the regime of Porfirio Díaz, 1878-1911) and sided with the carrancistas in the 1910 revolution. ....Rich in detail and solidly grounded in American and Mexican primary sources, including oral history interviews..., this book should be required reading in Chicano studies courses and for any scholar seeking an excellent model of transnational history. * Abraham Hoffman, Journal of American History *
This is an incredibly useful synthetic work, which, through well-researched vignettes, strings together the histories of many México-Tejano activists. González produces a truly intertwining, transnational study of this border zone (something which many works promise, but few actually deliver) and her analysis of women and gender is sharp and thoughtful....[Redeeming La Raza] is a love letter to the rich activist history of South Texas places and people. It illuminates a great deal about the histories of gender and respectability politics, intellectual production in the US-Mexico borderlands, and class chasms in Latino communities. It will also work well as a teaching tool. * Lori A. Flores, English Historical Review *
Throughout the chapters, González traces the evolution, transformation, and, at times, refusal of gente decente ideologies that animated transborder activism in the early twentieth century. She also gives critical attention to gender and its intersections with political development and involvement. González weaves the biographies of men and women enveloped in struggles for rights....Redeeming La Raza is an excellent text that will be of great interest to borderlands and Mexican American historians. Those who research histories of civil rights, modernity, class, race, ethnicity, gender, and culture in a Mexico and/or U.S. context will also find it to be an invaluable addition to studies of the twentieth century. * Iliana Yamileth Rodriguez, Journal of Southern History *
After reading this book, people should appreciate the broad overlaps in strategies connecting labor organizing with school advocacy, poll tax payments with cultural enrichment before World War II and the GI Bill generation. Redeeming la Raza leaves a vivid portrait of the cross-border organizing done by community-based activists in Texas during the hardening of Jim Crow and the U.S. Mexico border after World War I through the New Deal. In doing so, Gabriela Gonzalez demonstrates how difficult and important it is to redirect culture into politics in borderlands spaces such as Texas and the United States. * John Mckiernan-González, Texas Books in Review *
Redeeming La Raza is an excellent text * Iliana Yamileth Rodriguez, Journal of Southern History *
In Redeeming La Raza ... Gabriela González traces the multifaceted efforts of Mexican and Mexican American activists in the Texas-Mexico border region to confront structural and cultural obstacles to rights and progress for ethnic Mexicans throughout the first half of the twentieth century. Focusing in particular on a handful of individual biographical accounts, González reveals the ambition and the breadth of multiple strands of activism that both sought progress and focused on transformation in a broadly transnational context. These varied activists sought to confront both race- and class-based exploitation using the tools open to them as individuals familiar with the gendered dynamics of their transborder lives ... It is a complicated and rewarding book that covers familiar subjects in interesting new ways. * John Weber, American Historical Review *
This research significantly expands our knowledge of Mexican American, Texas, southwestern borderlands, and women's and gender history. Comprehensive, grounded on primary documents and essential secondary sources, and written in clear, jargon-free prose, González's work is to be commended for the way in which it explains how gender ideologies shaped and informed locally grown ideas about women's place in society and in its connection to greater American historical processes. * Sonia Hernández, Southwestern Historical Quarterly *
Redeeming La Raza takes the political and cultural ideas debated by Texas Mexicans along the US borderline seriously as intellectual history. Always attentive to differences shaped by class and gender, Gabriela González weaves a critical story of the impact of respectability politics, transnational modernism, and maternal feminism in the shaping and sustenance of a powerful transborder political culture."-George Sanchez, University of Southern California
This book is the first to weave numerous biographies and political perspectives of Mexicans/Chicanos across decades using the lens of transnationalism. González offers a most excellent treatment of transborder political culture showing how the Mexican immigrant middle class and Mexican American middle class sought to uplift working class Mexican immigrants from racism."-Cynthia E. Orozco, Eastern New Mexico University-Ruidoso
Gabriela González's erudite, deeply-researched, and far-reaching study of Mexicans in Texas should be read by students, scholars, activists, and others who care about the U.S.-Mexico border region, women's history, and civil rights. Capturing untold stories of women's leadership, international relations, and racial discrimination, Redeeming La Raza rewrites important chapters in twentieth-century American history. * Stephen Pitti, Yale University *
Gabriela González is an associate professor of history at the University of Texas at San Antonio.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780190909628
ISBN 10 0190909625
Title Redeeming La Raza
Author Gabriela Gonzlez
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Year published 2018-07-19
Number of pages 280
Prizes Winner of Winner of the Tejas Foco Nonfiction Book Award of the National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies Winner of the Liz Carpenter Award of the Texas State Historical Association Winner of the Coral Horton Tullis Memorial Prize of the Texas State Historical Association Winner of the Jim Parish Award for Documentation and Publication of Local and Regional History of the Webb County Heritage Foundation.
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.