Recounting a forgotten episode in the Long Civil Rights Movement, this book analyzes how news reporting of forced deportations of Mexicans in the 1930s created representations of Mexican Americans that endure today.
Recounting a forgotten episode in the Long Civil Rights Movement, this book analyzes how news reporting of forced deportations of Mexicans in the 1930s created representations of Mexican Americans that endure today.
A media historian and journalist, Melita M.Garza is a Pulitzer Prize nominee who has received awards from the Chicago Headline Club and the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. A former staff writer for Bloomberg news, the Chicago Tribune, Milwaukee Journal, and Los Angeles Times, she is currently an assistant professor of journalism at Texas Christian University's Bob Schieffer College of Communication.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Acknowledgments Introduction. The Crisis: They Came to Toil . . . but They Could Not Stay 1. 1929: To Pave a Way through Hostile and Barren Lands 2. 1930: A Thousand Times Better Off with Mexican Labor 3. 1931: The Tragedy of the Repatriated 4. 1932–1933: A New Deal for American Pioneers 5. Conclusion and Epilogue Appendix Notes Bibliography Index
Preface Acknowledgments Introduction. The Crisis: They Came to Toil . . . but They Could Not Stay 1. 1929: To Pave a Way through Hostile and Barren Lands 2. 1930: A Thousand Times Better Off with Mexican Labor 3. 1931: The Tragedy of the Repatriated 4. 1932–1933: A New Deal for American Pioneers 5. Conclusion and Epilogue Appendix Notes Bibliography Index
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