Daily Archives: March 23, 2025

Bibliography: Chicanos (Part 131 of 133)

Kim, Joon (2004). The Political Economy of the Mexican Farm Labor Program, 1942-64. Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, v29 n2 p13 Fall. The Mexican Farm Labor Program brought in an unprecedented number of Mexican workers to perform harvesting jobs in U.S. agriculture between 1942 and 1964. A political economy perspective is used to examine the process by which U.S. agriculture has come to depend on Mexican workers….

Ramirez, Catherine S. (2004). Deus Ex Machina: Tradition, Technology, and the Chicanafuturist Art of Marion C. Martinez. Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, v29 n2 p55 Fall. The visual art of Marion C. Martinez is examined. Through technology, Martinez reproduces and transforms traditional Indo-Hispanic art forms, at the same time, underscores New Mexico's history as a dumping ground for technological waste….

Estrada, Leobardo F. (1976). A Demographic Comparison of the Mexican Origin Population in the Midwest and Southwest. Azlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, 7, 2, 203-34, Sum 76. Utilizing available 1970 census data, the article compares the Mexican-origin populations residing in the Midwest and Southwest in terms of residential patterns, migration, median age, educational attainment, martial status, employment of wives, income, occupation, and industry. (NQ)…

Kanellos, Nicolas (1976). Fifty Years of Theatre in the Latino Communities of Northwest Indiana. Azlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, 7, 2, 255-65, Sum 76. The development of Latino drama is examined within the sociohistorical context of the Spanish speaking community's settlement and expansion. (NQ)…

Wells, Miriam J. (1976). Emigrants From the Migrant Stream: Environment and Incentives in Relocation. Azlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, 7, 2, 267-90, Sum 76. The decisions of Mexican American migrants to relocate permanently in Wisconsin were examined. It was shown that their decisions were strongly affected by the structural positions of decision makers with respect to economic opportunities and social networks. (NQ)…

Sepulveda, Ciro (1976). Una Colonia de Obreros: East Chicago, Indiana. (A Colony of Workmen: East Chicago, Indiana.). Azlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, 7, 2, 327-36, Sum 76. The article gives a brief overview of the Mexicano experience in East Chicago, Indiana during the 1920s and characterizes it within the context of the Mexicano unskilled laborer experience in a region where productive increases were of tantamount importance. (AUTHOR/NQ)…

Rios-Bustamante, Antonio Jose (1976). New Mexico in the Eighteenth Century: Life, Labor and Trade in la Villa de San Felipe de Albuquerque, 1706-1790. Azlan—-International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, 7, 3, 357-89, F 76.

Aragon, Janie Louise (1976). The People of Santa Fe in the 1790s. Azlan—-International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, 7, 3, 391-417, F 76.

de la Isla, Jose (1976). The Politics of Reelection: Se habla espanol. Azlan—-International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, 7, 3, 427-51, F 76. The article discusses what political strategies have been used by politicians to get the Spanish speaking population to help in the presidential elections. (NQ)…

Rice, Jacqueline (1983). Beyond the Cientificos: The Educational Background of the Porfirian Political Elite. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v14 n2 p289-306 Fall. Broadening the investigation of Mexico's Porfirian political elite, the study examines the education, professional training, and alternatives to formal education of 70 Union Liberal delegates. The delegates represent a microcosm of the political leaders of the middle Porfirian period. The article also discusses the formation of the Union Liberal. (SB)…

Skirius, John (1983). Barreda, Vasconcelos, and Mexican Educational Reforms. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v14 n2 p307-41 Fall. Reviews the contributions to Mexican education of Gabino Barredas' positivism between 1867-1898 and the contributions of Jose Vasconcelos during the 1920s. Discusses the secondary curriculum reforms of Barreda's era and the vocational education and the education for women and adults during the Vasconcelos era. (SB)…

Olivas, Michael A. (1983). Research and Theory on Hispanic Education: Students, Finance, and Governance. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v14 n1 p111-46 Spr. Reviews the status of Hispanic education, examines studies of Hispanic students, describes major finance and governance issues in Hispanic education, and explores theoretical models of internal colonialism as a means of understanding the condition of Hispanic education. Proposes a research agenda for Hispanic education. (Author/SB)…

Iadicola, Peter; Moore, Helen (1983). The Desegregated School and Status Relations among Anglo and Hispanic Students: The Dilemma of School Desegregation. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v14 n1 p147-73 Spr. Examines the effect of mixing students from different ethnic/racial and social class backgrounds on status relationships among Anglo and Hispanic students by integrating the findings of two streams of research which emanate from two social policy goals, cultural assimilation and reduction of racial prejudice. (SB)…

Valdes, Dennis Nodin (1981). Perspiring Capitalists: Latinos and the Henry Ford Service School, 1918-1928. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v12 n2 p227-39 Fall. The Ford Service School was a program established by the Ford Motor Company to train a small core of highly educated, well-connected men to set up the most important automotive empire in Latin America. This core group was crucial in setting up sales branches and assembly plants in foreign markets. (NQA)…

Cole, David L. (1981). Locus of Control in Cross-Cultural Perspective. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v12 n2 p241-57 Fall. Caution should be exercised in transporting the concept of locus of control to either Mexico or Japan, and by implication, to other cultures. Careful attention must be given both to the meaning of this concept in the other cultures, and to the behaviors predictable from its measurement within each culture. (Author/NQA)…

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Bibliography: Chicanos (Part 132 of 133)

Iadicola, Peter; Moore, Helen A. (1981). Resegregation Processes in Desegregated Schools and Status Relationships for Hispanic Students. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v12 n1 p39-58 Spr. Four resegregation processes (norm-referenced testing, classroom grouping, classroom competition, busing rates) reinforce in student status relationships the stratifying effects of an Anglo-dominated school environment. These processes were studied using data gathered from case studies of 10 desegregated elementary schools in California in 1973-74. (LC)…

Rodrigues, Raymond J. (1981). A Longitudinal Study of Bilingual English Syntax. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v12 n1 p75-87 Spr. Compares 1973 and 1978 studies of the English syntactic proficiency of bilingual Mexican-American fourth- and ninth-grade Spanish/English speakers in Las Vegas (New Mexico). Shows that students enrolled in bilingual education throughout the elementary school years perform better on syntactic maturity measures than do their counterparts not enrolled in bilingual education. (LC)…

Simoniello, Katina (1981). On Investigating the Attitudes toward Achievement and Success in Eight Professional U. S. Mexican Women. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v12 n1 p121-37 Spr. Parental attitudes toward education and achievement, parental obedience, family importance, socioeconomic status, perceived discrimination, and moral support from a mentor were factors affecting the attitudes and goal achievement of eight Mexican-American professional women (aged 24-60) interviewed. (LC)…

Arora, Shirley L. (1982). Proverbs in Mexican American Tradition. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v13 n1-2 p43-69 Spr-Fall. Examines proverb use among 304 Mexican Americans (aged 16-85) of Los Angeles (California), assembling information on how or where particular proverbs were learned, with whom or what kind of individual their use is associated, the occasions on which they are used, and general attitudes toward the use of proverbs. (LC)…

Arora, Shirley L. (1982). A Critical Bibliography of Mexican American Proverbs. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v13 n1-2 p71-80 Spr-Fall. The 19-item bibliography surveys the compilations of Mexican-American proverbs published to date and describes each entry (categorized by region–California, New Mexico, Texas, Mexico) in terms of type and quantity of material included, presence or absence of interpretive comments or translations, sources, organization, and accuracy of presentation. (Author/LC)…

Goldman, Shifra M. (1982). Mexican Muralism: Its Social-Educative Roles in Latin America and the United States. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v13 n1-2 p111-33 Spr-Fall. Traces the history of Mexican muralism (1920s to 1970s) as an art of advocacy intended to change consciousness and promote political action; shows how it can still be used in an educative manner in schools. Emphasizes the effects of three great muralists (Diego Rivera, Jose Clemente Orozco, and David Alfaro Siqueiros). (LC)…

Loza, Steven J. (1982). Origins, Form, and Development of the Son Jarocho: Veracruz, Mexico. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v13 n1-2 p257-74 Spr-Fall. Son Jarocho (specifically from Veracruz) is a song-and-dance form originating in Spain and implanted in Mexico during 17th- and 18th-century colonization. The jarocho style of music today is one of Latin America's most unique forms, using one to four instruments and characterized by its distinctive rhythm. (LC)…

Hendrick, Irving G. (1977). Early Schooling for Children of Migrant Farmworkers in California: The 1920's. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v8 p11-26 Spr-Sum-Fall. While Mexican children in the cities were often segregated, the children of Mexican migrant farmworkers were totally ignored by state educational officials before 1920. While a state-directed plan for these children was started in 1919, local school districts continued not to enforce state attendance requirements among the group. (NQ)…

Allsup, Carl (1977). Education Is Our Freedom: The American G.I. Forum and the Mexican American School Segregation in Texas, 1948-1957. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v8 p27-50 Spr-Sum-Fall. Social prejudice by Texas-Anglo society as reflected by politicians and administrators resulted in a segregated school system. However, the Mexican community never passively accepted discrimination in the schools. The American G.I. Forum's records and the action of the World War II generation indicate that Mexicans have long struggled to acquire equal educational opportunity. (NQ)…

Bailey, Kathleen M.; Galvan, Jose L. (1977). Accentedness in the Classroom. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v8 p83-97 Spr-Sum-Fall. Various training strategies are suggested to modify teachers' attitudes and to alter inappropriate behavior. The article suggests that university preparation for teachers should include a component which deals with culture and language variation, as well as the existing supervised student teaching experience. (NQ)…

Espinosa, Ruben W.; Garcia, Joseph O. (1977). A Study of Credentialed Staff-Pupil Ratios by Ethnicity in the California Public Schools. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v8 p217-36 Spr-Sum-Fall. By 1973-74 the largest student ethnic minority group in California public schools was Spanish surname with approximately 17.2 percent of the state's total public school population; however, the Spanish surname had the lowest credential staff-pupil ratio (1:98) of all groups for 1973-74. (NQ)…

Szymanski, Albert (1978). The Growing Role of Spanish Speaking Workers in the U.S. Economy. Aztlan–International Journal of Chicano Studies Research, v9 p177-208 Spr-Sum-Fall. Latin Americans are displacing Blacks in the most menial and low paying positions as a rapidly increasing percentage of the various categories of dirty work are being occupied by Spanish speaking people. As Blacks move into less menial and better paying positions, a new underclass of Spanish speaking immigrant workers is being created. (Author/NQ)…

Martinez, Thomas M. (1971). Chicanismo. EPOCA: The National Concilio for Chicano Studies Journal, 1, 2, 35-9, W 71. An attempt to explain substance of Chicanismo. (NQ)…

Hernandez, Humberto; And Others (1971). Student Perspectives on Mexican/American Studies. EPOCA: The National Concilio for Chicano Studies Journal, 1, 2, 87-96, W 71.

Rivera, Julius (1971). The Implementation of Mexican-American Studies in Texas Colleges and Universities. EPOCA: The National Concilio for Chicano Studies Journal, 1, 2, 79-86, W 71.

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