The Lost Land: The Chicano Image of the SouthwestUniversity of New Mexico Press, 1984 - 207 páginas A fascinating intellectual history of Hispano self-perception, this book traces the changes in Hispano views of the Southwest form earliest times to the present, particularly since the 1848 signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. |
Contenido
Aztlán Cíbola and Frontier New Spain | 7 |
The Mexican Far North | 23 |
The Lost Land | 43 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Acuña Albuquerque Angeles Anglo Anglo-American Arizona arrived Aztecs Aztlán barrios became border borderlands boundary Campa century Chávez Chicano movement civil claimed colonies Colorado conquered conquest Coronado despite Díaz early economic especially Espinosa expedition feared foreign frontier Guadalupe Hidalgo Hispanos History homeland Ibid immigrants Indians José Juan labor land grant Latin America López Luis Valdez LULAC major Meier and Rivera mestizo Mexi Mexican culture Mexican Revolution Mexican-Americans Mexico City Mexico Press migration Miguel Antonio Otero myth native Neighbor Policy newcomers newspaper North American northern nuevomexicanos organizations Otero Paso Pino political population province Quoted racial Ramírez Raza region reprint Republic result revolution Rodolfo Acuña San Antonio Santa Fe Seguín settlers society Sonora Southwest Mexicans southwestern Spain Spaniards Spanish-American Spanish-speaking statehood tejanos territory Texas Revolution throughout the Southwest Tijerina tion translation Tucson U.S. citizens United University of Texas Vallejo voz del pueblo York