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Ethnic Studies Review

Ethnic Studies Review is a magazine focusing on Social Sciences

Articles from Vol. 32, No. 2, 2009

Chang-Rae Lee's A Gesture Life: The Recuperation of Identity
In Chang-rae Lee's A Gesture Life, the elderly, wellrespected and fastidious Franklin "Doc" Hata begins an introspective journey toward a revitalized and reimagined identity. For Lee, this journey affords the chance to address ethnicity and immigration...
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Editor's Notes
Since the passing of two high-profile state legislative bills aimed at Arizona's Latino residents this past April, the significance of ethnicity for American citizens has once again surfaced as a topic for national debate. Whether to legitimize, or just...
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George S. Schuyler, Black and Conservative
When George S. Schuyler published his autobiography Black and Conservative in 1966, its title was intended to be paradoxical, underscoring how the two adjectives were rarely used together, particularly in an era that had recently seen the passage of...
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"If You're Black, Get Back!" the Color Complex: Issues of Skin-Tone Bias in the Workplace
Skin-tone has always played a role in the socioeconomic lives of African-Americans, and while there are always successes, there are also those who are not as fortunate. A major success for African Americans has come in the shape of the election of the...
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Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Education and Abolition
Some thirty years before Harriet Ann Jacobs opened the Jacobs Free School in Alexandria, Virginia in January 1864, one of her first students was her fifty-threeyear-old uncle, Fred. The seventeen-year-old Harriet appreciated her uncle's "most earnest...
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Nisei Politics of Identity and American Popular Music in the 1930s and 1940s
Growing nationalist thinking and anti-immigration legislation in American politics today calls for a critical historicizing of the continuing ambiguities of U.S. citizenry and notions of what it is to be an American. The identity crisis of Nisei-second...
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Pachucos, Chicano Homeboys and Gypsy Caló: Transmission of a Speech Style
The term caló is well-known within many Mexican American communities as a bilingual slang that is one of several speech styles in the community repertoire, closely associated with Pachuco groups of the U.S. Southwest that came to prominence in the 1940's....
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