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The Contested Homeland - by Erlinda Gonzales-Berry & David R Maciel (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Many books deal with New Mexico's past, but the twelve original essays here reinterpret that history for the first time from a Chicano perspective.
- Author(s): Erlinda Gonzales-Berry & David R Maciel
- 326 Pages
- History, United States
Description
About the Book
Studies territorial and rural New Mexico in the nineteenth century, the struggle for statehood, Nuevomexicano politics, immigration, urban issues in the twentieth century, the role of Spanish in education, ethnic identity, and the Chicano movement.Book Synopsis
Many books deal with New Mexico's past, but the twelve original essays here reinterpret that history for the first time from a Chicano perspective. Self-determination, resistance, and cultural maintenance are the recurring themes in the lives and struggles of Nuevomexicanos from 1848 to the present. The conflict has been not solely with the customs and institutions Anglos introduced--though certainly that has occurred. On a more fundamental level, the clash has been over modernization--how the Spanish language, folk traditions, and land grants can survive as a heritage for future generations amid English, new and secular values, and real estate booms and speculation.
Nuevomexicanos have confronted colonialism, ethnocentrism, and racism throughout their history. But as these essays make clear, pride in Spanish descent runs deep in New Mexico and has led to a vibrancy unmatched in any other region in the United States. Nuevomexicanos have not simply survived or endured. They have secured their influence through the highest level of education among all Chicanos in the United States, through greater political representation at the local and national level--and in both major parties--than in any other state, and through a culture that has simultaneously resisted and adapted to change.
"This collection is a first in taking a Chicano perspective. . . . An outstanding, important work. "--John R. Chávez, Southern Methodist University
Review Quotes
a"Contested Homeland" will make an excellent and much-needed college textbook for teaching history from a Chicano perspective.a
aWhile presenting thought-provoking challenges to traditional history, the book provides a historical overview of Hispanic Mexican Americans in New Mexico, "Nuevomexicanos." . . . As the authors point to the unique cultural identity of the "Nuevomexicanos . . ." Maciel and Gonzales-Berry have taken one more step to rightfully place the history of the "Nuevomexicanos" where it belongs: in the history of the U.S.a
While presenting thought-provoking challenges to traditional history, the book provides a historical overview of Hispanic Mexican Americans in New Mexico, "Nuevomexicanos." . . . As the authors point to the unique cultural identity of the "Nuevomexicanos . . ." Maciel and Gonzales-Berry have taken one more step to rightfully place the history of the "Nuevomexicanos" where it belongs: in the history of the U.S.
""The Contested Homeland" tells, in bits and pieces, an intriguing story."
"Contested Homeland" will make an excellent and much-needed college textbook for teaching history from a Chicano perspective.
"While presenting thought-provoking challenges to traditional history, the book provides a historical overview of Hispanic Mexican Americans in New Mexico, "Nuevomexicanos. . . . As the authors point to the unique cultural identity of the "Nuevomexicanos . . . Maciel and Gonzales-Berry have taken one more step to rightfully place the history of the "Nuevomexicanos where it belongs: in the history of the U.S."