Status Updates From The Afro-Latin@ Reader: His...
The Afro-Latin@ Reader: History and Culture in the United States (a John Hope Franklin Center Book) by
Status Updates Showing 1-27 of 27
Aida
is on page 88 of 584
"Although they frequently face the presumption that one is either Black or Latin@, Afro-Latin@s can have experiences and social contacts that link them to both communities. They negotiate parallel, if differently configured, exclusions as they move between Latin American and United States societies. And like Schomburg they can find spaces to exert leadership in struggles to make Latin@ communities live up to..."
— Jul 26, 2023 01:48PM
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Aida
is on page 43 of 584
"...sumptuary law was to return the free women of color, visibly and symbolically, to the subordinate and inferior status associated with slavery."
— Jul 26, 2023 01:21PM
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Aida
is on page 10 of 584
"While the post-Civil Rights era brought a widespread reflection on race and Blackness among African Americans, especially because of the rapid rise in Black immigration from the Caribbean and Africa, Latin@ identity came to be increasingly defined as non-Black, and in some ways anti-Black."
— Jul 25, 2023 12:07PM
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Aida
is on page 3 of 584
"We have identified four primary "coordinates" to a deeper and more flexible understanding of that specific reality: group history, transnational discourse, relations between African Americans and Latin@s, and the specific lived experience of being Afro-Latin@."
— Jul 25, 2023 11:53AM
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Crystal Serrano
is on page 27 of 584
Just read "The Earliest Africans in North America" by Peter H. Wood, p. 19-26
— Feb 12, 2013 01:25PM
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Crystal Serrano
is on page 527 of 584
Read the article by John Sawyer: "Racial Politics in Multiethnic America: Black and Latina/o Identities and Coalitions"
— Feb 05, 2013 10:36AM
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