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Review Essay

Volume 21 • Number 1

Fall 2001



 


LATINOS IN THE UNITED STATES: THEIR HISTORY AND RACIAL IDENTITY

Harvest of Empire: A History of Latinos in America. By Juan Gonzšlez. New York: Viking Penguin, 2000. xx + 346 pp. Maps, tables, notes, bibliography, and index. $27.95.

Changing Race: Latinos, the Census, and the History of Ethnicity in the United States. By Clara E. Rodrguez. New York: New York University Press, 2000. xv + 283 pp. Tables, notes, bibliography, and index. $55.00 (cloth); $19.00 (paper).

Manuel G. Gonzales
Diablo Valley College


The 2000 decennial census will confirm that the Latino population in the United States now exceeds 32 million. Buoyed by both high birthrates and heavy immigration, this figure represents a 45 percent increase during the decade of the 1990s. Moreover, across the country Hispanic communities are rapidly expanding beyond their traditional strongholds. Puerto Ricans and Cubans, for example, are venturing well beyond the barrios of the Northeast and Florida, respectively. Mexicanos, who represent about two-thirds of the Hispanic total, have now become a national minority rather than one identified exclusively with California and the Southwest. As these ethnic communities converge, a pan-Latino identity is surfacing, an emergent trend encouraged both by entrepreneurs seeking to simplify marketing strategies and ethnic politicians hoping to create a broader electoral base. Mirroring this momentous demographic shift in American society is an escalating interest in Latinos (or Hispanics). Representative of the recent literature on the subject are the two volumes under consideration: Harvest of Empire and Changing Race.


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