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Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920 Book

Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920
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Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920, When New Mexico became a territory of the United States in 1848, the Hispanic population faced an influx of American immigrants. The neomexicanos, residents of some of the oldest Hispanic communities in the United States, found their life-ways disdained, , Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920
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  • Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920
  • Written by author Doris Meyer
  • Published by University of New Mexico Press, 2001/01/01
  • When New Mexico became a territory of the United States in 1848, the Hispanic population faced an influx of American immigrants. The neomexicanos, residents of some of the oldest Hispanic communities in the United States, found their life-ways disdained,
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Authors

Note From Series Editors
Preface
1 Introduction: Neomexicanos and Their Newspapers 3
2 Anonymous Voices in Verse 19
3 Banditry, Politics, and Poetry in Old Las Vegas 45
4 Mexicano/Neomexicano: The Writing of Jose Escobar 59
5 Identity Crisis: Responses to Negative Stereotyping 89
6 Language and Cultural Erosion 111
7 Mixed Messages: Images of Women in the Press 129
8 Felipe Maximiliano Chacon: An American Author 149
9 Luis Tafoya: Inscribing a Culture in Transition 165
10 History and Identity: Benjamin M. Read and His Neomexicano Precursors 183
11 Conclusion: The Language of the Press 207
App Profiles of Neomexicano Editors 213
Notes 219
Bibliography 255
Index 269


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Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920, When New Mexico became a territory of the United States in 1848, the Hispanic population faced an influx of American immigrants. The neomexicanos, residents of some of the oldest Hispanic communities in the United States, found their life-ways disdained, , Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920

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Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920, When New Mexico became a territory of the United States in 1848, the Hispanic population faced an influx of American immigrants. The neomexicanos, residents of some of the oldest Hispanic communities in the United States, found their life-ways disdained, , Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920

Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920

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Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920, When New Mexico became a territory of the United States in 1848, the Hispanic population faced an influx of American immigrants. The neomexicanos, residents of some of the oldest Hispanic communities in the United States, found their life-ways disdained, , Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920

Speaking for Themselves : Neomexicano Cultural Identity and the Spanish-Language Press, 1880-1920

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