Ben Waber reviewed Corazón de Dixie by Julie M. Weise
A Qualitative, Regional Look at the Last ~100 Years of Mexicanos in the South
4 stars
This is a great look at how Mexicans and Mexican Americans have worked and lived in the US south from 1910. Weise shows how Mexicanos mostly eschewed solidarity with Black Americans during Jim Crow, and the complicated history of the Bracero program and its unique relationship with the Mexican state is endlessly fascinating. There is also some review of more recent decades, documenting how previous acceptance by conservatives gave way to animosity. I would've liked a lot more quantitative support for some of the claims made here, since it's hard to know how much to generalize from the isolated case studies and media reports offered here. Overall, this is a great history on a topic and offers essential insight on a crucial topic for everyone in America. Highly recommend
This is a great look at how Mexicans and Mexican Americans have worked and lived in the US south from 1910. Weise shows how Mexicanos mostly eschewed solidarity with Black Americans during Jim Crow, and the complicated history of the Bracero program and its unique relationship with the Mexican state is endlessly fascinating. There is also some review of more recent decades, documenting how previous acceptance by conservatives gave way to animosity. I would've liked a lot more quantitative support for some of the claims made here, since it's hard to know how much to generalize from the isolated case studies and media reports offered here. Overall, this is a great history on a topic and offers essential insight on a crucial topic for everyone in America. Highly recommend