A Promising Problem
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Edited by:
Carlos Kevin Blanton
About this book
Chicana/o history has reached an intriguing juncture. While academic and intellectual studies are embracing new, highly nuanced perspectives on race, class, gender, education, identity, and community, the field itself continues to be viewed as a battleground, subject to attacks from outside academia by those who claim that the discipline promotes racial hatred and anti-Americanism. Against a backdrop of deportations and voter suppression targeting Latinos, A Promising Problem presents the optimistic voices of scholars who call for sophisticated solutions while embracing transnationalism and the reality of multiple, overlapping identities.
Showcasing a variety of new directions, this anthology spans topics such as growth and reassessment in Chicana/o history manifested in a disruption of nationalism and geographic essentialism, the impact of legal history, interracial relations and the experiences of Latino subpopulations in the US South, race and the politics of religious history, transborder feminism in the early twentieth century, and aspirations for a field that increasingly demonstrates the relational dynamics of cultural production. As they reflect on the state of their field, the contributors offer significant insights into sociology, psychology, anthropology, political science, education, and literature, while tracing the history of activism throughout the last century and debating the very concepts of “Chicano” and “Chicano history.” Although the political landscape is fraught with closed-off rhetoric, A Promising Problem encourages diversity of thought and opens the possibilities of historical imagination.
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Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Preface
vii -
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Acknowledgments
xiii -
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CHAPTER ONE Looking In while Stepping Out: Growth, Reassessment, and the Promising Problem of the New Chicana/o History
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CHAPTER TWO The Accidental Historian; or, How I Found My Groove in Legal History
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CHAPTER THREE Moving beyond Aztlán: Disrupting Nationalism and Geographic Essentialism in Chicana/o History
59 -
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CHAPTER FOUR Chicana/o History as Southern History: Race, Place, and the US South
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CHAPTER FIVE Sacred Spaces: Race, Resistance, and the Politics of Chicana/o and Latina/o Religious History
111 -
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CHAPTER SIX Chicanas in the US-Mexican Borderlands: Transborder Conversations of Feminism and Anarchism, 1905–1938
135 -
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CHAPTER SEVEN Eastside Imaginaries: Toward a Relational and Transnational Chicana/o Cultural History
161 -
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Select Bibliography of Recent Publications in Chicana/o History
185 -
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Contributors
197 -
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Index
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