Mambo Montage: The Latinization of New York
By Agustín Laó-Montes; Arlene Dávila | Go to book overview
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Publication information:
Book title: Mambo Montage:The Latinization of New York.
Contributors: Agustín Laó-Montes - Author, Arlene Dávila - Author.
Publisher: Columbia University Press.
Place of publication: New York.
Publication year: 2001.
Page number: *.
This material is protected by copyright and, with the exception of fair use, may not be further copied, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means.
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Table of contents
- Title Page *
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments ix
- Contributors xi
- Mambo Montage *
- Introduction - The Latinization of New York City 1
- Notes *
- Bibliography 44
- Part I - Histories, Social Movements, Cultural Struggles 55
- Chapter One - The Emergence of an Antillean Nation and Community in New York City, 1860–1901 57
- Notes *
- Chapter Two - Confronting Race and Building Community in Jim Crow Baseball, 1906–1950 73
- Notes *
- Chapter Three - Latino Caribbean Diasporas in New York 97
- Notes *
- Bibliography *
- Chapter Four - Urban Regime, Latino Social Movements, Ideologies of Latinidad 119
- Notes *
- Bibliography *
- Chapter Five - From Nationalist to Pan-Latino Projects 159
- Notes *
- References *
- Part II - Narrating, Imaging, and Performing Latinidad 183
- Chapter Six - Latino Literature and Nuyorican Traditions 185
- Notes *
- Chapter Seven - Performing Trans-Boricua Memories, Identities, and Nationalisms through the Death of HéCtor Lavoe 207
- Notes *
- Bibliography *
- Chapter Eight - Hip-Hop, Puerto Ricans, and Ethnoracial Identities in New York 235
- Notes *
- References *
- Chapter Nine - The Affirmation of PuertorriqueñIdad in the Community Murals of New York City 263
- Notes *
- Part III - Latino/a Identities and the Politics of Space and Place 291
- Chapter Ten - Placing PuertorriqueñIdad in Lower Manhattan 293
- Notes *
- Chapter Eleven - Latino Identities and Practices among Dominicans in New York City 319
- Notes *
- References *
- Chapter Twelve - Undocumented Mexicans in New York 337
- References *
- Chapter Thirteen - Crossing Queer and Latino Boundaries 363
- Notes *
- Chapter Fourteen - Transcultural Readings of Latin American Women's Ways 387
- Notes *
- References *
- Appendix - Background on Puerto Rican Informants *
- Part IV - Latinizing Cityscapes 409
- Chapter Fifteen - Marketing and the Language That Makes Us “hispanics” 411
- Notes *
- References *
- Chapter Sixteen - Eating in Cuban 425
- Notes *
- Bibliography *
- Chapter Seventeen - Dance, the Studio, and Latino Culture 449
- Notes *
- References *
- Chapter Eighteen - Public Signs, Civic Inclusion, and Language Rights in New York City (And Beyond) 473
- Notes *
- References *
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