Chicano

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    The Chicano Community

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    United States over the past several decades has shaped their history and strengthened the community as a whole. There has been an overwhelming fight against many injustices imposed upon the Chicano community by outsiders, and one of those issues is reproductive justice. For many women of color, especially in the Chicano and Black communities, there has been a reproductive oppression that is constantly imposed upon them by government and medical officials. Women of color, are more common to be on many government

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    Throughout history beginning with the Spanish inquisition, Chicanos have been overpowered, underestimated, exploited, and forgotten. Chicanos have been ripped from their dignity and viewed as ignorant, lazy, and uneducated. It was not till Rodolfo Corky Gonzalez created a poetic piece, “I am Joaquin”, that would change the way Mexicans thought of themselves for all eternity. No longer were they this broken social identity, but now they embraced being both the Mayan prince, and the sword and flame

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    Chicano Built Environment

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    Chicanos/as/x have experienced endeavors with built environment in the United States from settling into a space where they feel content and then having that taken away from them by force. A built environment is the way surroundings affect a person’s experiences; for Chicanos living in America, where racialization and discrimination were strongly present, the environment they wanted to call home was being used against them. Their surrounding environment was being used to group them together and deport

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    of Violence in Chicano and Chicana Art “Non-violence is not inaction. It is not discussion. It is not for the timid or weak. Non-violence is hard work. It is the willingness to sacrifice. It is the patience to win.” Cesar E. Chavez In the art world the artwork that comes from the brilliant minds of Chicanos and Chicanas is more than just art. Its art with a cause that many of Chicanos can relate to because of the themes that are depicted throughout the art for viewers. Chicano art has a major

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    Chicano Civil rights El Movimiento, also known as the Chicano civil rights movement, was the empowerment of Mexican Americans in the 1960’s and 70’s. Almost half a century later, Chicanos, Latinos, and Hispanics continue to fight a struggle. You may be wondering “what is a Chicano?” A Chicano is anyone who grew up in the U.S., but if their parents grew up in Mexico then moved to the states. This movement is one of the least studied civil rights socials, but this is a topic I have felt strong about

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    The Chicano movement that occurred in the 60’s and 70’s came out during the same time of the Civil Rights Movement. It was about fighting for social, political, and economic justice for Chicano people. The issues that were highlighted in the movement were; restoration of land grant rights, fair treatment of farm workers, educational access and dismantling racial discrimination for Chicano youth, and pushing for voting rights. Common historiographies of the Chicano civil rights movement in the 60

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    The Chicano movement occurred in the 1960’s and 1970’s as a response to socioeconomic and political inequality. Chicanos faced negative racial discrimination and was denied the same basic civil rights as well as the same educational quality that White people received. As the Mexican Americans developed a sense of consciousness of their political and ethnic inequality, they began to act politically. The Chicano movement aimed to restore land grants, increase farm workers' rights, enhance education

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    The cultural practices that Chicanos/Chicanas partake in such as being pachucos and pachucas, being actively involved in feminism, creating music and using stereotypes in film reflect their struggle to attain freedom and empowerment against Anglo society and within themselves. The various elements that make up Chicano culture have helped them resist Anglo culture and develop subcultures within the Chicano community. In addition, it has also allowed them to free themselves from the idea of becoming

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    In the article “Status of the Historiography of Chicano Education: A Preliminary Analysis” Guadalupe San Miguel Jr mentions Several factors that have altered and molded Chicanos throughout time. The cultural imbalance, geographical and society changes caused Chicanos to feel unfit for the Anglo-Society. This prevented Chicanos students from attending school and developing English literacy. For instance, the article mentions how schools located in California and Texas excluded Mexicans from attending

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    entrenched in a repressive Anglo-dominated society. It was out of this oppression that the dawn of new revolution was taking shape and bringing with it a resurgence of Mexican art as it transformed to define the identity of Mexican Americans as Chicano. The Chicano Movement began as a grassroots organization to unite and represent the farm workers of California, primarily composed of Mexican Americans, with the United Farm Workers (UFW) union spearheaded by Cesar Chavez and Delores Huerta. As the movement

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