The Lost Land: The Chicano Image of the SouthwestUNM Press, 1984 - 207 pages "Seeks to demonstrate that Chicanos, precisely because of their long-standing presence in the region, have developed their own images of the Southwest, many of which conflict sharply with Anglo-American views."--Raymund A. Paredes, University of California, Los Angeles "A boldly conceived, wide-ranging essay that grapples thoughtfully with complex and subtle issues."--David J. Weber |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 43
Page
... Occupied Latin America 5. The Spanish Southwest 6. The American Southwest 7. Aztlán Rediscovered 63 85 107 129 Notes Bibliography Index 157 181 201 1 7 Acknowledgments For their assistance I would like to thank the V.
... Occupied Latin America 5. The Spanish Southwest 6. The American Southwest 7. Aztlán Rediscovered 63 85 107 129 Notes Bibliography Index 157 181 201 1 7 Acknowledgments For their assistance I would like to thank the V.
Page 1
... occupied the region or migrated through it on their way south . The belief that the South- west ( especially the areas long settled by Mexicans ) is the Chicano homeland and the belief that Mexicans are indigenous to and dispossessed of ...
... occupied the region or migrated through it on their way south . The belief that the South- west ( especially the areas long settled by Mexicans ) is the Chicano homeland and the belief that Mexicans are indigenous to and dispossessed of ...
Page 5
... they believe can only be achieved through control of the space they occupy . The story of the struggle for that environment is central to Chicano history . 12 1 Aztlán , Cíbola , and Frontier New Spain The The Chicano Homeland 5.
... they believe can only be achieved through control of the space they occupy . The story of the struggle for that environment is central to Chicano history . 12 1 Aztlán , Cíbola , and Frontier New Spain The The Chicano Homeland 5.
Page 7
... occupied it temporarily before moving on to Mexico proper . These early ancestors probably had no conception of the Southwest on the scale visualized by their descendants . Southwestern cultures from earliest times until after the ...
... occupied it temporarily before moving on to Mexico proper . These early ancestors probably had no conception of the Southwest on the scale visualized by their descendants . Southwestern cultures from earliest times until after the ...
Page 10
... occupied and paci- fied areas . They supplied the raw materials and muscular energy for the con- struction of the ships that decided the seige of the Mexica capital . Spanish military equipment and tactics carried the day , but Indian ...
... occupied and paci- fied areas . They supplied the raw materials and muscular energy for the con- struction of the ships that decided the seige of the Mexica capital . Spanish military equipment and tactics carried the day , but Indian ...
Contents
23 | |
The Lost Land | 43 |
Occupied Latin America | 63 |
The Spanish Southwest | 85 |
The American Southwest | 107 |
Aztlán Rediscovered | 129 |
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Common terms and phrases
Angeles Anglo Anglo-American Antonio Arizona arrived attempt Aztecs Aztlán became become began believed border borderlands boundary California called caused central century Chicano citizens City civil claimed colonies Colorado concerning continued culture despite developed earlier early economic especially fact feared feel felt forced foreign formed Francisco frontier gained Hispanos homeland immigrants important increased independence Indians labor land language late Latin America least less lived lost major March Mexican Mexican-Americans Mexico Mexico City minority moved movement myth native never newspaper North American northern nuevomexicanos occupied once organizations Otero Policy political population position present Press problems province Pueblo Quoted region relations reprint result Santa schools seen settlers social society southern Southwest Spain Spanish Spanish-speaking Studies territory Texas throughout tion United University Veracruz workers World York