Description

Book Synopsis
It might seem that African Americans and Mexican Americans would have common cause in matters of civil rights. This volume, which considers relations between blacks and browns during the civil rights era, carefully examines the complex and multifaceted realities that complicate such assumptions and that revise our view of both the civil rights struggle and black-brown relations in recent history.

Trade Review
"A solid anthology."—R. Acuna, Choice
"This book is a groundbreaking step in the evolution of the exciting subfield of black-brown relations. Each of the essays contains valuable lessons, and the book should be required reading for scholars of the civil rights movements and of American racial formations."—Max Krochmal, Journal of American History
"Brian D. Behnken has brought together an important group of senior and junior scholars on the making of black-brown relations to document the long history of cooperation and conflict between the two groups. Behnken's collection of essays successfully documents the many spaces of coalition and discontent between the African American civil rights and Chicano movements."—Alberto Rodriguez, Southwestern Historical Quarterly
"This volume is a fascinating and important contribution to the field."—Julie Leininger Pycior, Journal of Southern History

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations 000

Introduction 000

Brian D. Behnken

1. Not Similar Enough: Mexican American and African American Civil Rights Struggles in the 1940s 000

Lisa Y. Ramos

2. The Movement in the Mirror: Civil Rights and the Causes of Black-Brown Disunity in Texas 000

Brian D. Behnken

3. Complicating the Beloved Community: The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the National Farm Workers Association 000

Lauren Araiza

4. The Neighborhood Adult Participation Project: Black-Brown Strife in the War on Poverty in Los Angeles 000

Robert Bauman

5. "Mexican versus Negro Approaches" to the War on Poverty: Black-Brown Competition and the Office of Economic Opportunity in Texas 000

William Clayson

6. Cesar and Martin, March 68 000

Jorge Mariscal

7. Black, Brown, and Poor: Civil Rights and the Making of the Chicano Movement 000

Gordon Mantler

8. Brown-Eyed Soul: Popular Music and Cultural Politics in Los Angeles 000

Luis Alvarez and Daniel Widener

9. Raising a Neighborhood: Informal Networks between African American and Mexican American Women in South Central Los Angeles 000

Abigail Rosas

10. A New Day in Babylon: African American and Mexican American Relations at the Dawn of the Millennium 000

Matthew C. Whitaker

List of Contributors 000Index 000

The Struggle in Black and Brown

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    A Paperback / softback by Brian D Behnken, Brian D Behnken

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      Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
      Publication Date: 01/01/2012
      ISBN13: 9780803262713, 978-0803262713
      ISBN10: 080326271X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      It might seem that African Americans and Mexican Americans would have common cause in matters of civil rights. This volume, which considers relations between blacks and browns during the civil rights era, carefully examines the complex and multifaceted realities that complicate such assumptions and that revise our view of both the civil rights struggle and black-brown relations in recent history.

      Trade Review
      "A solid anthology."—R. Acuna, Choice
      "This book is a groundbreaking step in the evolution of the exciting subfield of black-brown relations. Each of the essays contains valuable lessons, and the book should be required reading for scholars of the civil rights movements and of American racial formations."—Max Krochmal, Journal of American History
      "Brian D. Behnken has brought together an important group of senior and junior scholars on the making of black-brown relations to document the long history of cooperation and conflict between the two groups. Behnken's collection of essays successfully documents the many spaces of coalition and discontent between the African American civil rights and Chicano movements."—Alberto Rodriguez, Southwestern Historical Quarterly
      "This volume is a fascinating and important contribution to the field."—Julie Leininger Pycior, Journal of Southern History

      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations 000

      Introduction 000

      Brian D. Behnken

      1. Not Similar Enough: Mexican American and African American Civil Rights Struggles in the 1940s 000

      Lisa Y. Ramos

      2. The Movement in the Mirror: Civil Rights and the Causes of Black-Brown Disunity in Texas 000

      Brian D. Behnken

      3. Complicating the Beloved Community: The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the National Farm Workers Association 000

      Lauren Araiza

      4. The Neighborhood Adult Participation Project: Black-Brown Strife in the War on Poverty in Los Angeles 000

      Robert Bauman

      5. "Mexican versus Negro Approaches" to the War on Poverty: Black-Brown Competition and the Office of Economic Opportunity in Texas 000

      William Clayson

      6. Cesar and Martin, March 68 000

      Jorge Mariscal

      7. Black, Brown, and Poor: Civil Rights and the Making of the Chicano Movement 000

      Gordon Mantler

      8. Brown-Eyed Soul: Popular Music and Cultural Politics in Los Angeles 000

      Luis Alvarez and Daniel Widener

      9. Raising a Neighborhood: Informal Networks between African American and Mexican American Women in South Central Los Angeles 000

      Abigail Rosas

      10. A New Day in Babylon: African American and Mexican American Relations at the Dawn of the Millennium 000

      Matthew C. Whitaker

      List of Contributors 000Index 000

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