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Paperback Mongrels, Bastards, Orphans, and Vagabonds: Mexican Immigration and the Future of Race in America Book

ISBN: 0375713204

ISBN13: 9780375713200

Mongrels, Bastards, Orphans, and Vagabonds: Mexican Immigration and the Future of Race in America

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Book Overview

An unprecedented account of the long-term cultural and political influences that Mexican-Americans will have on the collective character of our nation.In considering the largest immigrant group in... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent - Enlightening

This is a very well written, well researched book. It is scholarly, yet very readable. In this day and age when too many Americans resort to an over-simplification of complex social issues, this book opens the doors of understanding. It is a "must read" for anyone with an interest in understanding the dynamics of the increasingly significant Hispanic demographic.

History as it affects today

Almost from the very beginning, the United States has exhibited a schizophrenic attitude toward Mexican-Americans and Mexican immigrants living in the United States. On one hand we have often been desirous of the advantages they have offered, be it as agricultural migrant workers, inexpensive alternatives for domestic tasks, or a host of other job-related activities that our society demands but has trouble filling. Balancing these favorables are at least an intermittent fear of a quickly growing minority, if not a downright xenophobia about our neighbors to the south, especially during economic downturns. What Gregory Rodriguez has offered us is a nicely written history of Mexican-Americans and Mexican immigrants from the arrival of Hernando Cortes in 1519 to the present day as seen through the filter of mestizaje-the racial and cultural synthesis of Mexican descendants into larger cultures. In his political and cultural account of over five hundred years of Mexican/American relationships, Rodriguez covers many of the main historical elements of this time period: Indian-Spanish interaction, the Spanish racial system, Mexican independence, the western expansion of the United States, Texas independence, and the Mexican-American War. In his concluding chapters, Rodriguez goes on to cover key elements of the past hundred years and their impact on our history: the Nativist movements, WWII, the bracero program, the Chicano movement, multi-culturalism, Cesar Chavez, bi-lingual education, and the rapid growth of Spanish language media. Despite the periods of anti-immigrant fervor that tends to re-emerge on a regular basis in the United States, especially during difficult economic times, Rodriguez has a decidedly optimistic outlook. He feels quite strongly that just like the Spanish racial system was undermined by the assimilation of Mexicans into the larger Spanish culture in colonial Mexico, that Mexican-Americans are well on the way to usurping and eventually destroying the more pernicious parts of the Anglo-American racial system as well. Armchair Interviews says: An important read to understand the change in America.

At long last--a sane book

Rodriguez challenges conventional wisdom about race relations in the USA, and what we can expect in the future. I found it to be one of the few sane books on the topic, which doesn't treat race or racism as constant and immutable, but shows the dynamics in which it is done on the ground. Also, as someone who reads quite a bit of boring academic texts on the subject, I found his writing really refreshing, both accessible and challenging at the same time.

History at its Best.

Gregory Rodriguez has written a remarkable, enjoyable, and fascinating book that traces 500 years of Mexican and Mexican American history. Clearly written, fair-minded, and full of amazing details, if you only read one book about the Mexican experience in the United States it should be this one. Rodriguez is a columnist at the Los Angeles Times who tackles a variety of issues concerning contemporary migration and integration. This book digs deep into the Mexican past to try to give us a glimpse of the American future. Without taking a side in today's immigration debate--this is no polemic--Mongrels, Bastards, Orphans, and Vagabonds gives us much needed historical context and goes a long way in telling us who Mexicans are and how they will influence U.S. society. This book is really history at its best--as you're reading it, you not only learn about the past, but about the present, and the future.

Much needed context on an important issue

In this book, Gregory Rodriguez does what any good scholar, journalist, or political commentator ought to focus his or her efforts on: pointing out the obvious reality lying underneath the veneer of rhetoric, ravings, and spurious ideological claims. Given the well-worn manufactured hysteria and poor scholarship surrounding Latino immigration--and its consequent political and cultural ramifications--Mongrels. Bastards, Orphans and Vagabonds is as much a call for taking a deep breath as it is a concise argument concerning the impact Latinos will have on American notions of notions of race. I'd like to emphasize two strengths of Rodriguez's work. First, he is making what is essentially an argument based on a single--though incredibly complex--historical process, namely mestizaje. Rather than using the historical record as a convenient backdrop or filler for his book, the historical record is the argument. Weaving such a narrative is not seemingly difficult. Constructing an overarching argument from 400 years of history is, however, no easy task. If indeed, as he argues, Mexican-Americans are contributing significantly--if not singlehandedly--to the destabilization of "race" in the 21st century U.S. , this process will not be the result of some grandiose ideological project, but rather a consequence of innumerable and often contradictory social practices. Rather than merely claiming such an outcome has historical precedence, Rodriguez's narrative serves to demonstrate that what is occurring and will occur over the subsequent decades is tied directly to an historical process that began effectively in 1492. Of course, Rodriguez is sensitive to the nuances and complexities of the historical record, and his analysis never shies from the dark and exploitative side of mestizaje. Rather, by highlighting these contradictions and inconsistencies, his argument is bolstered. By using the historical in this manner, his argument is bolstered. The burden is no placed on the shoulders of both reactionary nativists and proponents of Chicanismo to demonstrate to the rest of us how mestizaje--a complex, contradictory process embedded in numerous social formations and economic arrangements--will not continue in yet another venue, i.e. the United States. This is precisely the second strength of Rodriguez's book: his taking to task of the poor claims and intellectually lazy rhetoric of both left and right concerning the place of Latinos in American society. The right insists on the destructive consequences Mexican and, more generally, Latino immigration will have on American culture. Rodriguez, by emphasizing the sociological trends playing out over the last 60 years, casts doubts on the impending failure of Latino assimilation. Mexican-Americans, he argues, are assimilating. But, it is the way that they're assimilating, or rather their emerging influence on American culture and ideological idioms that is different. Much as the Catholic and Jewish immigrants of the
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