Waubonsee Community College

Making Mexican Chicago, from postwar settlement to the age of gentrification, Mike Amezcua

Label
Making Mexican Chicago, from postwar settlement to the age of gentrification, Mike Amezcua
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
mapsillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Making Mexican Chicago
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1280405786
Responsibility statement
Mike Amezcua
Series statement
Historical studies of urban America
Sub title
from postwar settlement to the age of gentrification
Summary
"Mike Amezcua details the complex political struggle over white-flight neighborhoods in postwar Chicago, showing that while white oppression of blacks was often based in supremacist ideologies, discrimination against Latinx peoples-especially Mexicans-was rooted in questions of sovereignty and belonging. Immigration policy was central to the "defense" of the white city. While the story of white flight from blackness is well known, Amezcua demonstrates that white fears of brownness were likewise powerful-yet they also set the terms by which Latinx community and political power did develop. As Mexicans and Mexican Americans accrues political power, they became integral to the city's economy-and increasingly tended toward social conservatism, intent on protecting the value they were creating. Their assimilation was less to whiteness per se than to white capitalist agendas"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Crafting capital -- Deportation and demolition -- From the jungle to Las Yardas -- Making a Brown Bungalow Belt -- Renaissance and revolt -- Flipping colonias
Classification
Content
Mapped to