In the last forty-five years, immigration reform has brought tens of millions of new immigrants from Latin American countries to the United States. Since critical race theory pioneers Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic compiled the first edition ofThe Latino/a Conditionin 1998, the population has continued to grow exponentially, while scholarship on Latinos/as has grown just as quickly. The second edition ofThe Latino/a Conditionbrings together a wide range of new and classic Latino and Latina voices from the fields of law, sociology, history, media studies, and politics to address questions such as:
Who exactly is a Latino? Who is Hispanic? Who is Chicano?
How did Spanish-speaking people come to live in the United States?
Is the Latino family a source of strength or oppression? What about Catholicism?
Should the United States try to control Latino immigration, and is this even possible?
What are the most common media stereotypes of Latino people?
Are Latinos white? What role does law play in the racial construction of the group?
Collecting a wealth of perspectives on these and other issues central to the Latino/a experience, Delgado and Stefancic offer a broad portrait of Latino/a life in the United States at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I The Shape of the Latino Group: Who Are We and What Are We Talking about Anyway?
Part II Conquest and Immigration: How We Got (Get) Here
Part III Nativism, Racism, and Our Social Construction as a “Problem” Group: How Once We Were Here, We Were Racialized by the Dominant Culture
Part IV Racial Construction and Demonization in Mass Culture: Media Treatment and Stereotypes
Part V lă'