Manifest Destinies, Second Edition: The Making of the Mexican American Race

Manifest Destinies, Second Edition: The Making of the Mexican American Race

by Laura E Gómez
Manifest Destinies, Second Edition: The Making of the Mexican American Race

Manifest Destinies, Second Edition: The Making of the Mexican American Race

by Laura E Gómez

eBook

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Overview

Manifest Destinies is an essential resource for understanding the complex history of Mexican Americans and racial classification in the United States.
 
This is the history of the original Mexican Americans—the people living in northern Mexico in 1846 during the onset of the Mexican American War. The war abruptly came to an end two years later, and 115,000 Mexicans became American citizens overnight. Yet their status as full-fledged Americans was tenuous at best. Due to a variety of legal and political maneuvers, Mexican Americans were largely confined to a second class status. How did this categorization occur, and what are the implications for modern Mexican Americans?
 
Manifest Destinies fills a gap in American racial history by linking westward expansion to slavery and the Civil War. In so doing, law and sociology professor Laura E. Gómez demonstrates how white supremacy structured a racial hierarchy in which Mexican Americans were situated relative to Native Americans and African Americans alike. Steeped in conversations and debates surrounding the social construction of race, this book reveals how certain groups become racialized, and how racial categories can not only change instantly, but also the ways in which they change over time.
 
This second edition is updated to reflect the most recent evidence regarding the ways in which Mexican Americans and other Latinos were racialized in both the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. The book ultimately concludes that it is problematic to continue to speak in terms of Hispanic “ethnicity” rather than consider Latinos qua Latinos alongside the United States’ other major racial groupings. A must read for anyone concerned with racial injustice and classification today.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781479850686
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 11/21/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 313
Sales rank: 387,725
File size: 868 KB

About the Author

Laura E.Gómez is Professor of Law, Sociology and Chicana/o Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. She is the author of Misconceiving Mothers: Legislators, Prosecutors and the Politics of Prenatal Drug Exposure and the editor of Mapping “Race”: Critical Approaches to Health Disparities Research (with Nancy López).
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