Anything But Mexican

Chicanos in Contemporary Los Angeles

Rodolfo F Acuna author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Verso Books

Published:17th Apr '96

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Anything But Mexican cover

A classic of Chicano studies in a new edition.

This volume describes the realities facing Chicanos in contemporary Los Angeles: their history, demography, politics, economic issues and labour culture, institutions, gangs and gang violence, police abuse and right-wing attacks on immigrants.By the year 2000, Mexicans and other Latinos will comprise fifty percent of the population of Los Angeles. In this new book, the author of the widely praised Occupied America describes the harsh realities facing Chicanos in LA today.

Anything But Mexican challenges neo-liberal interpretations of the history of Los Angeles which blame Mexicans and other immigrants of color for the decline of the city. Acuña's provocative work confronts these historical myths, signalling that Latinos will not be dismissed. -- Deena González, Pomona College
Required reading on Chicanos in the Southwest. This book will stand amongst the classics in Chicano Studies. -- Teresa Cordova, University of New Mexico
This book defines important political and social space for Latinos in what has become the capital of Mexicans in the US. Anything But Mexican is a sensitive and often pointed discourse. -- Carlos Velez-Ibanez, UC Riverside
Rodolfo Acuña is one of the foremost scholar/activists in the country, bridging the gap between the Chicano movement and a multi-racial left that is often uninformed about the growing strategic importance of Latinos in the US. -- Eric Mann, Director, Labor Community Strategy Center, Los Angeles
A political and social history every bit as insightful and powerful as the earlier works by a pioneering Chicano scholar dubbed by some the 'W.E.B. Dubois of Chicano Studies.' -- James Cockcroft, SUNY Empire

ISBN: 9781859840313

Dimensions: 234mm x 155mm x 28mm

Weight: 628g

350 pages