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21. Manifesto de Memoria: (Re)Living the Movement without Blinking
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Inés Hernández-Ávila
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: Movements, Movimientos, and Movidas 1
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Part I. Hallway Movidas
- 1. Francisca Flores, the League of Mexican American Women, and the Comisión Femenil Mexicana Nacional, 1958–1975 33
- 2. Mujeres Bravas: How Chicanas Shaped the Feminist Agenda at the National IWY Conference in Houston, 1977 51
- 3. “Women Need to Find Their Voice”: Latinas Speak Out in the Midwest, 1972 76
- 4. “It’s Not a Natural Order”: Religion and the Emergence of Chicana Feminism in the Cursillo Movement in San Jose 91
- 5. Many Roads, One Path: A Testimonio of Gloria E. Anzaldúa 110
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Part II. Home-Making Movidas
- 6. La Causa de los Pobres: Alicia Escalante’s Lived Experiences of Poverty and the Struggle for Economic Justice 123
- 7. Women Who Make Their Own Worlds: The Life and Work of Ester Hernández 138
- 8. Feminista Frequencies: Chicana Radio Activism in the Pacific Northwest 159
- 9. Excavating the Chicano Movement: Chicana Feminism, Mobilization, and Leadership at El Centro de la Raza, 1972–1979 174
- 10. The Space in Between: Exploring the Development of Chicana Feminist Thought in Central Texas 189
- 11. Visions of Utopia while Living in Occupied Aztlán 207
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Part III. Movidas of Crossing
- 12. Forging a Brown-Black Movement: Chicana and African American Women Organizing for Welfare Rights in Los Angeles 227
- 13. “Tu Reata Es Mi Espada”: Elizabeth Sutherland’s Chicana Formation 245
- 14. “La Raza en Canada”: San Diego Chicana Activists, the Indochinese Women’s Conference of 1971, and Third World Womanism 261
- 15. María Jiménez: Reflexiones on Traversing Multiple Fronteras in the South 276
- 16. De Campesina a Internacionalista: A Journey of Encuentros y Desencuentros 290
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Part IV. Memory Movidas
- 17. Unpacking Our Mothers’ Libraries: Practices of Chicana Memory before and after the Digital Turn 299
- 18. Refocusing Chicana International Feminism: Photographs, Postmemory, and Political Trauma 317
- 19. La Mariposa de Oro: The Journey of an Advocate 327
- 20. My Deliberate Pursuit of Freedom 344
- 21. Manifesto de Memoria: (Re)Living the Movement without Blinking 355
- Notes 375
- Contributors 432
- Index 440
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: Movements, Movimientos, and Movidas 1
-
Part I. Hallway Movidas
- 1. Francisca Flores, the League of Mexican American Women, and the Comisión Femenil Mexicana Nacional, 1958–1975 33
- 2. Mujeres Bravas: How Chicanas Shaped the Feminist Agenda at the National IWY Conference in Houston, 1977 51
- 3. “Women Need to Find Their Voice”: Latinas Speak Out in the Midwest, 1972 76
- 4. “It’s Not a Natural Order”: Religion and the Emergence of Chicana Feminism in the Cursillo Movement in San Jose 91
- 5. Many Roads, One Path: A Testimonio of Gloria E. Anzaldúa 110
-
Part II. Home-Making Movidas
- 6. La Causa de los Pobres: Alicia Escalante’s Lived Experiences of Poverty and the Struggle for Economic Justice 123
- 7. Women Who Make Their Own Worlds: The Life and Work of Ester Hernández 138
- 8. Feminista Frequencies: Chicana Radio Activism in the Pacific Northwest 159
- 9. Excavating the Chicano Movement: Chicana Feminism, Mobilization, and Leadership at El Centro de la Raza, 1972–1979 174
- 10. The Space in Between: Exploring the Development of Chicana Feminist Thought in Central Texas 189
- 11. Visions of Utopia while Living in Occupied Aztlán 207
-
Part III. Movidas of Crossing
- 12. Forging a Brown-Black Movement: Chicana and African American Women Organizing for Welfare Rights in Los Angeles 227
- 13. “Tu Reata Es Mi Espada”: Elizabeth Sutherland’s Chicana Formation 245
- 14. “La Raza en Canada”: San Diego Chicana Activists, the Indochinese Women’s Conference of 1971, and Third World Womanism 261
- 15. María Jiménez: Reflexiones on Traversing Multiple Fronteras in the South 276
- 16. De Campesina a Internacionalista: A Journey of Encuentros y Desencuentros 290
-
Part IV. Memory Movidas
- 17. Unpacking Our Mothers’ Libraries: Practices of Chicana Memory before and after the Digital Turn 299
- 18. Refocusing Chicana International Feminism: Photographs, Postmemory, and Political Trauma 317
- 19. La Mariposa de Oro: The Journey of an Advocate 327
- 20. My Deliberate Pursuit of Freedom 344
- 21. Manifesto de Memoria: (Re)Living the Movement without Blinking 355
- Notes 375
- Contributors 432
- Index 440