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NB Latino Studies New Books in Latino Studies is an author-interview podcast channel that showcases recently-published books in the field of Latino Studies.

It has a back catalog of over 75 podcast episodes. New Books in Latino Studies is part of the New Books Network author-interview podcast consortium (http://files.newbooksnetwork.com)

In less than half a century, the American West changed dramatically from a region of dynamic borders, politics, and iden...
13/06/2022

In less than half a century, the American West changed dramatically from a region of dynamic borders, politics, and identities to a more fixed zone of borders and demarcations. This is the argument made by Sarah Deutsch in MAKING a MODERN U.S. WEST: The Contested Terrain of a Region and Its Borders, 1898-1940 (University of Nebraska Press), a major new synthetic work and part of Nebraska’s History of the American West series. In this wide ranging and transnational book. Deutsch connects movements often seen as separate, such radical organizing in the labor movement, in Mexican politics, and women’s suffrage, to make the case that Western politics in the early 20th century were particularly unsettled, the region’s political future yet undecided. Similarly fluid dynamics defined racial and sexual histories of the region. It was World War I and the years following when the US government found the tools it deemed necessary to define and categorize people and places in ways that would curtail this fluidity. A remarkable work, Deutsch strongly makes the case that the early 20th century was a crucial period for defining how exactly the modern US West would look. Learn more on the podcast ⤵️

https://newbooksnetwork.com/making-a-modern-u-s-west-the-contested-terrain-of-a-region-and-its-borders-1898-1940

FIGURES of the FUTURE: Latino Civil Rights and the Politics of Demographic Change (Princeton University Press) examines ...
14/12/2021

FIGURES of the FUTURE: Latino Civil Rights and the Politics of Demographic Change (Princeton University Press) examines the “contemporary population politics of national Latino civil rights advocacy.” The book challenges readers to generally understand democratic projections as problematic, political, and manufactured -- and specifically consider the case of how prominent Latino civil rights groups used such projections during the Obama and Trump administrations to “accelerate the when of Latino political power.” Deploying three main sources of data, Michael Rodríguez-Muñiz asks us to see that “it is politics -- not demography -- that governs what we think and feel about ethnoracial demographic change.” We don’t need better data -- we need a more critical and vigilant eye to the political phenomenon. Listen in 👇

https://newbooksnetwork.com/figures-of-the-future

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