07754nam a2200493Ii 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.0m o d cr 180928t20182019fluab ob 001 0 eng d a9781315726366q(e-book : PDF) a(OCoLC)1048356254 aFlBoTFGcFlBoTFGerda1 aeng 4aE184.M5bR68 2018 7aSOCx000000 2bisacsh 7aSOCx026000 2bisacsh 7aJHB 2bicscc04a973/.04687222300aRoutledge Handbook of Chicana/o Studies /cedited by Francisco A. Lomelí, Denise A. Segura and Elyette Benjamin-Labarthe. a1st edition. 1aBoca Raton, FL :bRoutledge, an imprint of Taylor and Francis,c[2018]. 4c©2019. a1 online resource (516 pages) :b20 illustrations, text file, PDF. atext2rdacontent acomputer2rdamedia aonline resource2rdacarrier1 aRoutledge International Handbooks aIncludes bibliographical references and index.00tIntroduction: Handbook of Chicana/o Studies, Francisco A. Lomel, Denise A. Segura and Elyette Benjamin-Labarthe -- Part I. Chicana/o History and Social Movements -- --Introduction to Chicana/o History and Social Movements -- --1. What is Aztln?: Homeland, Quest, Female Place, David Carrasco -- --2. Chicano History- A General Approach, Mario T. Garca -- --3. Recent Chicana/o Historiography: Advances, Shortcoming, and Challenges, Alex M. Saragoza -- --4. The Chicano Movement, Ramn A. Gutirrez -- --5. A Genealogy of Chicana History, the Chicana Movement, and Chicana Studies, Miroslava Chvez-Garca -- --6. Bilingual Education: History, Policy, and Insights from Critical Race Theory, Grace P. McField -- Part II. Borderlands: Contested (Im)migrations, Culture and Citizenship -- --Introduction to Borderlands: Contested (Im)migrations, Culture and Citizenship -- --7. Mxico y lo Mexicano in Aztln: Transborder Economic, Cultural and Political Links, David R. Maciel and Mara Rosa Garca-Acevedo -- --8. Immigration, Latinos, and the Media, Leo R. Chvez -- --9. Mobilizing for Life: Illegality, Organ Transplants, and Migrant Biosociality, Jonathan Xavier Inda -- --10. Discourses of Violence and Peace: About and On the U.S.-Mexico Border, Mara-Socorro Tabuenca -- --11. Reconstructing Home in the Borderlands, Patricia Zavella -- Part III. -- Cultural Production in Local and Global Settings -- --Introduction to Cultural Production in Local and Global Settings -- --12. Colonial, De-colonial, and Transnational Choreographies in Ritual Danzas and Popular Bailes of Greater Mexico, Enrique R. Lamadrid -- --13. The Challenge of Chicana/o Music, Steven Loza -- --14. Chicana/o Literatures Multi-Spatiotemporal Projections & Impacts; or Back to the Future, Frederick Luis Aldama -- --15. From Don Juan to Dolores Huerta: Foundational Chicana/o Films, Catherine Leen -- --16. Origins and Evolution of Homies as Hip Rasquache Cultural Artifacts: Taking the Homies Out of the Barrio or the Barrio Out of the Homies, Francisco A. Lomel -- Part IV. Indigeneity, Mestizaje, Postnationalism, and Transnationalism: Overarching Phenomena of Interdisciplinarity -- --Introduction to Indigeneity, Mestizaje, Postnationalism, and Transnationalism: Overarching Phenomena of Interdisciplinarity -- --17. The Embodied Epistemology of Chicano Mestizaje, Rafael Prez-Torres -- --18. New Tribalism and Chicana/o Indigeneity in the Work of Gloria Anzalda, Domino Renee Prez -- --19. "Aztln es una fbula": Navigating Postnational Spaces in Chicana/o Culture, Marc Priewe -- --20. Regional Singularity and Decolonial Chicana/o Studies, Lene M. Johannessen -- --21. Transnationalism Chicana/o Style, Karin Ikas -- Part V. Chicana/o Identities and Political Expressions -- --Introduction to Chicana/o Identities and Political Expressions -- 22. Narrative Identity and the Dialectics of Selfhood in Chicana/o Writing, Sophia Emmanouilidou -- --23. The Challenge of Colorism in the Chicana/o Community, Margaret Hunter -- --24. Bilingualism and Biculturalism: Spanish, English, Spanglish?, Cecilia Montes-Alcal -- --25. The Landscapes and Languaging of Chicana Feminisms, Ada Hurtado -- --26. The Aesthetics of Healing and Love: An Epistemic Geneaology of Jota/o Aesthetic Traditions, William A. Calvo-Quirs -- Part VI. Violence, Resistance and Empowerment -- Introduction to Violence, Resistance and Empowerment -- --27. The Art of Disruption: Chicana/o Arts Politicized Strategies for Aesthetic Innovation, Guisela Latorre -- --28. Resisting the Dominant Anglo-American Discourse: Political Activism and the Art of Protest, Astrid M. Fellner and Claire M. Massey -- --29. Spanish Language Media: From Politics of Resistance to Politics of Pan-ethnicity, Xavier Medina Vidal and Federico Subervi-Vlez -- --30. Transnational Incest: Sexual Violence and Migration in Mexican Families, Gloria Gonzlez-Lpez -- Part VII. International Perspectives on Chicana/o Studies: From Aztln to Shores Abroad -- --Introduction to International Perspectives on Chicana/o Studies: From Aztln to Shores Abroad -- --31. Chicana/o Studies in France: Emergence and Development, Elyette Benjamin-Labarthe -- --32. Chicano Studies and Inter-American Studies in Germany, Gabriele Pisarz-Ramrez -- --33. Reception of Chicano Literature and Culture in Italy: A Survey, Erminio Corti -- --34. A Trans-Atlantic Look at Chicano Culture and Literature from a Spanish Perspective, Jos Antonio Gurpegui.3 aThe Routledge Handbook of Chicana/o Studies is a unique interdisciplinary resource for students, libraries, and researchers interested in the largest and most rapidly growing racial-ethnic community in the United States and elsewhere which can either be identified as Chicano, Latino, Hispanic, or Mexican-American. Structured around seven comprehensive themes, the volume is for students of American studies, the Social Sciences, and the Humanities. The volume is organized around seven critical domains in Chicana/o Studies:Chicana/o History and Social Movements, Borderlands, Global Migrations, Employment, and Citizenship, Cultural Production in Global and Local Settings, Chicana/o Identities, Schooling, Language, and Literacy, Violence, Resistance, and Empowerment, nternational Perspectives. The Handbook will stress the importance of the historical origins of the Chicana/o Studies field. Starting from myth of origins, Aztlán, alleged cradle of the Chicana/o people lately substantiated by the findings of archaeology and anthropology, over Spanish/Indigenous relations until the present time. Essays will explore cultural and linguistic hybridism and showcase artistic practices (visual arts, music, and dance) through popular (folklore) or high culture achievements (museums, installations) highlighting the growth of a critical perspective grounded on key theoretical formulations including borderlands theories, intersectionalities, critical race theory, and cultural analysis. aAlso available in print format. 7aSOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General.2bisacsh 0aMexican AmericansvHandbooks, manuals, etc. 0aMexican AmericansxStudy and teachingvHandbooks, manuals, etc. 0aElectronic books.1 aLomelí, Francisco A.,eeditor.1 aSegura, Denise A.,eeditor.1 aBenjamin-Labarthe, Elyette,eeditor.2 aTaylor and Francis.08iPrint version: z9781138847873(Hardback) 0aRoutledge International Handbooks.40uhttps://www.routledgehandbooks.com/doi/10.4324/9781315726366zClick here to view.