NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
Eastside Landmark:
A History of the East Los Angeles Community Union 1968¬1993.
By John R. Chšvez. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1998. vii + 321
pp. Maps, illustrations, notes, references, and index. $45.00.
Mexican American Women Activists: Identity and Resistance
in Two Los Angeles Communities. By Mary S. Pardo. Philadelphia:
Temple University Press, 1998. vii + 322 pp. Illustrations, appendix,
notes, references and index. $59.95 (cloth); $19.95 (paper).
Gilda Laura Ochoa
Pomona College
To take seriously the history and persistence of struggle, resistance,
and political activism among Mexican-origin communities, more case studies
such as Eastside Landmark and Mexican American Women Activists
need to be conducted and published. The detail and depth provided by these
two studies are significant for revealing the heterogeneity among the
Mexican-origin population as well as the diverse strategies these communities
have employed to create change. Focusing on Los Angeles, with its history
of conquest and colonization and where the Mexican-origin population currently
represents the largest ethnic group in the area, Eastside Landmark
and Mexican American Women Activists present material that is
both unique to understanding community politics in Los Angeles and is
applicable to communities throughout the United States.
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