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Cummins, Amy – English in Texas, 2016
With immigrant youth an important presence in Texas schools, reading new books for children and adolescents about their experiences can help to grow understanding and empathy for refugees and other immigrants. This article highlights five new books by Latina, Latino, and Latin American authors with characters who migrate to the United States from…
Descriptors: Refugees, Immigrants, Childrens Literature, Adolescent Literature
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Serna, Elias – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2013
This essay looks at Ethnic Studies activism in Arizona through a rhetorical lens in order to highlight epistemological aspects of activities such as a high school Chicano Literature class, Roberto "Dr. Cintli" Rodriguez's journalism, and student activism to defend the Mexican-American Studies Department. Taking rhetoric's premise that…
Descriptors: Activism, Ethnic Studies, Mexican Americans, Epistemology
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Galasso, Regina – Hispania, 2012
The Hispanic literature of New York has often been classified as belonging to a handful of canonical authors or selected national groups. However, examples from the early years of the newspaper "La Prensa" and Felipe Alfau's novel "Chromos", as well as consideration for New York's cultural climate during the first decades of…
Descriptors: History, Barriers, Hispanic American Literature, Newspapers
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Postma, Regan L. – Hispania, 2013
This article discusses what is at stake in teaching works written in "Spanglish" in Spanish departments and what teaching such works might mean for students and the scholarly community at large. This article primarily comes out of the author's experiences teaching "Spanglish" works in Spanish courses at a major research…
Descriptors: Spanish, English, Code Switching (Language), Hispanic American Literature
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Acosta, Curtis – Multicultural Perspectives, 2014
In response to the banning of Mexican American Studies in Tucson, students in the newly formed Chican@ Literature, Art, and Social Studies program displayed their resiliency in the face of the oppressive actions of the Tucson Unified School District and the state of Arizona. This article serves as a platform for the voices of these dedicated youth…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Cultural Maintenance, Hispanic American Culture, Resilience (Psychology)
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Dumitrescu, Domnita – Hispania, 2013
The session that the AATSP organized at this year's MLA Convention in Boston (held on January 4, 2013) was dedicated to a topic that has been the object of constant debate in the past decades: the use of "Spanglish" as a marker of identity among US Latinos. The author states that she puts "Spanglish" into quotation marks…
Descriptors: Spanish, English, Code Switching (Language), Hispanic Americans
Mole, Beth – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Nobody likes the current system of peer review, and most everybody agrees it should move online. But from there, opinions diverge. As humanities editors continue to experiment with Web-based technology, two proposed online tools are highlighting disagreement over what needs fixing. Peter H. Sigal, a blue-haired associate professor of history at…
Descriptors: History, Opinions, Peer Evaluation, Hispanic American Culture
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Ramirez, Pablo C.; Jimenez-Silva, Margarita – Multicultural Perspectives, 2015
In this article the authors draw from culturally responsive teaching and multicultural education to describe performance poetry as an effective strategy for validating secondary aged Latino youths' lived experiences. Supported by teacher modeling and the incorporation of community poets, students created and shared their own powerful poems that…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Poetry, Secondary School Curriculum, Hispanic American Culture
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Szeghi, Tereza M. – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2011
This article complements the existing body of Ruiz de Burton scholarship by providing the first sustained examination of her literary representations of American Indians in both "Who Would Have Thought It?" (1872) and "The Squatter and the Don" (1885), and by exploring how these representations serve her broader aims of social and political…
Descriptors: Authors, Mexican Americans, American Indians, Novels
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Saldana, Rene, Jr.; Moore, David W. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2010
Rene Saldana, Jr., an assistant professor at Texas Tech University, is a writer of short stories, poetry, and novels. In order to get his storytelling right, he has relied on his memory when writing memoirs and consulted popular culture and family when writing fiction. In order to get his university teaching right, he reads seminal texts on…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Novels, Poetry, Mexican Americans
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Davalos, Karen Mary – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2009
Based on an oral history interview, this essay examines the work of Yolanda M. Lopez, one of the most significant Chicana artists of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. It posits that her work portrays feminist intersectionality and oppositional consciousness, predating the Chicana feminist literature on these paradigms. Documenting her…
Descriptors: Oral History, Feminism, Activism, Mexican Americans
Horwedel, Dina – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2007
For most college students, literature courses began in high school and consisted almost entirely of the classics of America and Western Europe. English professor Norma E. Cantu says the emergence of Hispanic literature and its growing popularity on college campuses around the country--and the world--is proof that American literature is expanding…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Literature, Higher Education, College Curriculum
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Tace Hedrick – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2009
Despite their differences in place and time, the woman-centered Chilean poet Gabriela Mistral and the Chicana lesbian feminist writer Gloria Anzaldua both looked to a transnational intellectual American history that frequently connected discourses of esotericism, indigenismo, and mestizaje. My comparative approach shows how both women used these…
Descriptors: United States History, Feminism, Race, Homosexuality
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Cutler, John Alba – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2008
This essay seeks to intervene in critical discussions about Arturo Islas's 1984 novel "The Rain God", as well as to suggest the potential for synthesizing discourses heretofore deployed in disparate conversations about disability, sexuality, and ethnicity. I first demonstrate how the novel's queer characters, Miguel Chico and Felix, pose critical…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Sexuality, Novels, Literature Appreciation
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Rodriguez, Ralph E. – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2007
This essay is a cursory examination of 1972 and the early 1970s. These were foundational years for Chicana/o literature. The author has only been able to offer a suggestive analysis of some of the literary production during this period. The author has not discussed the numerous periodicals and journals of the period, some underground, some with…
Descriptors: Essays, Hispanic American Literature, Libraries, Cultural Influences
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