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The Roots Of Chicano Movement

The Roots Of Chicano Movement. When did the Chicano Movement begin?. There are many different beliefs of when was the start of the Chicano Movement. For example: Columbus first attempt to land in the Americas The defense of Tenochtitlan in 1521 At the end of the Mexican American War in 1848

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The Roots Of Chicano Movement

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  1. The Roots Of Chicano Movement

  2. When did the Chicano Movement begin? There are many different beliefs of when was the start of the Chicano Movement. For example: • Columbus first attempt to land in the Americas • The defense of Tenochtitlan in 1521 • At the end of the Mexican American War in 1848 • Most scholars believe it was in the mid 1960’s corresponding with the black power movement.

  3. What was the Chicano Movement? The Chicano Movement of the 1960s, also called the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, also known as El Movimiento, is an extension of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement which began in the 1940s with the stated goal of achieving Mexican American liberation. The main point for these movements were to open up the doors of universities to people of color and establish Chicano Studies.

  4. Chicano and Chicana Movements There were many different goals and visions that people wanted to accomplish. Some of those goals or visions were to improve farm workers, to end Jim Crow segregation and police repression, and to improve educational opportunities. Other types of movement that blossomed in time were the equality for gender, access to higher education, and immigrant rights.

  5. Organizations Each of these movements spawned hundreds of organizations such as: • United Farm Worker’s Union • La RazaUnidaParty • La Alianza de Pueblos Libres • Brown Berets • The National Chicano Moratorium • CASA - Hermandad General de Trabajadores • The Crusade For Justice • The Mexican American Youth Organization • MEChA • The August 29th Movement • ComisionFemenilNacional Mexicana

  6. Differences Chicano Movement Mexican Civil Rights • National Character • Mass Nature • Strong Student base at colleges and universities • While there had always been political Resistance since the Mexican-American War it was not until after World War II that Mexican Americans began to be visible on college campuses. VS.

  7. Chicano Studies When Chicano studies was created, its Purpose was to give intellectual support to the movement and to listen to the voices of both men and women and the community organizations. Prior to the development of Chicano studies as a discipline, very little knowledge existed about the Chicano, says Refugio Rochín, director of the Julian Samora Research Institute at Michigan State University. (p.12). Neither was there a Chicano studies curriculum and very few Chicano professors.

  8. Scholars Samora, who taught at Notre Dame from 1959- 1985, along with folklorist AmericoParedesand scholar labor activist, Ernesto Galarza, — was one of the few scholars who studied Mexican Americans and the Mexican American community. With the advent Chicano studies programs, for the first time, Chicano and Chicana scholars began to produce knowledge about their own community. “Chicano studies changed the way we viewed the land we lived on,” and it also allowed Chicanos to see U.S. imperialism says Rochín. It also connected Chicanos to their indigenous roots and Native American studies, he says.

  9. Chicano Studies and Its Beauty Chicano studies is not just a simple study. It has its own merit and some unique literature. Chicano and Chicana studied has helped view the study of the family, bilingual issues, immigrant studies and the study of mestizaje. The study of living and dealing with duality can be helpful to societies that are also now having to deal with similar populations and ethnic tensions.

  10. Videos you can watch http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8mJzaMlXD4

  11. Maria Herrera Sobek Maria Herrera Sobek, a professor at UC Irvine is the kind of scholar that was a participant of the Chicano movement. Born of farm worker immigrant parents, Sobek grew up in a shack and attended segregated schools in Texas and also picked cotton. Today, a renowned poet, she says herbackground helped shaped her academic studies. Her work on folklore and corridos or ballads comes directly from her upbringing.

  12. Proposition 187 What is proposition 187? Proposition 187 was to make illegal aliens ineligible for public benefits. This lead to the new activism when hundreds of thousands of junior and senior high and college students walked out of schools and held marches and rallies in opposition to California’s anti-immigrant Proposition 187.

  13. Be Proud This new activism is also being established in the current multicultural movement to defend affirmative action in which men and women and members of all races are struggling together to fight off the anti-affirmative movement. Ybarra says that despite the continuing negative attacks against Latinos and other people of color, “We [the 60’s generation] have to be proud. There’s still a lot to do, but we have to remember that we did accomplish a lot.”

  14. Is the Movement dead? Genevieve Aguilar, a senior at Hanks High School in El Paso, who recently saw a preview of the forthcoming PBS special “Chicano,” says that the Chicano movement is definitely not dead. that it lives in students like herself who battle against students who believe that racism no longer exists and who don’t see a need for Chicano or Latino programs.

  15. Work Cited • "Chicano! A History of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement." Chicano! A History of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement.N.p., n.d. Web. 06 Nov. 2013. • Rodriguez, Roberto, (Writer) “The Origins and History of the Chicano Movement.” JSRI Occasional Paper#7. The Julian Samora Research Institute, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, 1996. • "Prop. 187 Approved in California - Migration News | Migration Dialogue." Prop. 187 Approved in California - Migration News | Migration Dialogue. N.p., n.d. Web. 07 Nov. 2013.

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