Between Here and There illustrates how large-scale migration became entrenched in the socioeconomic fabric of the United States and Mexico, tracing how migration became a major political issue in the early twentieth century in both countries and became the largest emigration between two states in modern history.
Between Here and There illustrates how large-scale migration became entrenched in the socioeconomic fabric of the United States and Mexico, tracing how migration became a major political issue in the early twentieth century in both countries and became the largest emigration between two states in modern history.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Daniel Morales is an assistant professor of history at Virginia Commonwealth University and Director of the Migration Studies Lab, where he leads the Latino Virginia Project. A native of southern California, the son of migrant workers, and the grandson of repatriates and braceros, he writes and speaks on immigration-related issues inside and outside of academia, including for NPR and PBS.
Inhaltsangabe
* Acknowledgments * Introduction: The Roots of Mexican Migration * Chapter 1: Revolution and Migration: The Rise of "Migration Fever" in San Luis Potosí and Guanajuato, 1890-1920 * Chapter 2: Navigating the Borderlands: Migrants in the Mining and Cotton Regions of Arizona and Texas, 1900-1925 * Chapter 3: Into the North: Railroads, Sugar Beets, and Steel in the Spread of Mexican Migration to the Midwest, 1910-1930 * Chapter 4: Entre Familia y Patria: The Paths of Migration in Central Mexico, 1920-1930 * Chapter 5: Tejas, Afuera de México: Newspapers, the Mexican Government, Mutualistas, and Migrants in San Antonio, 1915-1940 * Chapter 6: Caught in the Middle: Migrant Labor in Southern California, 1920-1940 * Chapter 7 El Retorno: Remaking Lives in Mexico, 1930-1942 * Epilogue: The Persistent Political Economy of Migrant Labor * Appendix: Counting the Uncounted: The Mexican Migrant Study, 1910-1940 * Notes * Bibliography * Index
* Acknowledgments * Introduction: The Roots of Mexican Migration * Chapter 1: Revolution and Migration: The Rise of "Migration Fever" in San Luis Potosí and Guanajuato, 1890-1920 * Chapter 2: Navigating the Borderlands: Migrants in the Mining and Cotton Regions of Arizona and Texas, 1900-1925 * Chapter 3: Into the North: Railroads, Sugar Beets, and Steel in the Spread of Mexican Migration to the Midwest, 1910-1930 * Chapter 4: Entre Familia y Patria: The Paths of Migration in Central Mexico, 1920-1930 * Chapter 5: Tejas, Afuera de México: Newspapers, the Mexican Government, Mutualistas, and Migrants in San Antonio, 1915-1940 * Chapter 6: Caught in the Middle: Migrant Labor in Southern California, 1920-1940 * Chapter 7 El Retorno: Remaking Lives in Mexico, 1930-1942 * Epilogue: The Persistent Political Economy of Migrant Labor * Appendix: Counting the Uncounted: The Mexican Migrant Study, 1910-1940 * Notes * Bibliography * Index
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