Beautiful Latin Favorites/Hermosas Canciones Latinas
Amanda Peach
Mariachi tesoro De Rebecca Gonzales
September 12, 2016
8:00 P.M.
Phelps-Stokes Auditorium
Stephenson memorial concert
Based in Los Angeles, Mariachi Tesoro is a multicultural, mixed gender group of professional musicians. They delight their audiences with a wide variety of genres from traditional Mariachi to Tex-Mex, Latin and Jazz.

Come check out the convocation display and some of these terrific books!

Oye Como Va! by
Deborah Pacini Hernandez
Call Number: 781.6408 P118o 2010
Publication Date: 2009-12-28
Pacini Hernandez presents an analysis of the hybridity of Latino musical practices, carefuly documenting the transnational musical interactions between Latinos in the United States & in their countries of origin.

Rhythms of Race by
Christina D. Abreu
Call Number: E-Book
Publication Date: 2015-05-01
Among the nearly 90,000 Cubans who settled in New York City and Miami in the 1940s and 1950s were numerous musicians and entertainers, black and white, who did more than fill dance halls with the rhythms of the rumba, mambo, and cha cha cha. In her history of music and race in midcentury America, Christina D. Abreu argues that these musicians, through their work in music festivals, nightclubs, social clubs, and television and film productions, played central roles in the development of Cuban, Afro-Cuban, Latino, and Afro-Latino identities and communities. Abreu draws from previously untapped oral histories, cultural materials, and Spanish-language media to uncover the lives and broader social and cultural significance of these vibrant performers. Keeping in view the wider context of the domestic and international entertainment industries, Abreu underscores how the racially diverse musicians in her study were also migrants and laborers. Her focus on the Cuban presence in New York City and Miami before the Cuban Revolution of 1959 offers a much needed critique of the post-1959 bias in Cuban American studies as well as insights into important connections between Cuban migration and other twentieth-century Latino migrations.

Latinos in the New South by
Heather A. Smith; Owen J. Furuseth
Call Number: 975.004 L357 2006
Publication Date: 2006-10-28
Latinos have emerged as one of the fastest-growing ethnic populations in the American South. A 'New South' is taking shape in a region where culture and class relations have traditionally been constructed along black-white divides and experience absorbing culturally or linguistically foreign immigrants has been limited. This book presents a multidisciplinary examination of the impacts and responses across the Southeastern United States to contemporary Latino immigration. The rapid and large-scale movement of Latinos into the region has challenged old precepts and forced Southerners to confront the impacts of globalization and transnationalism in their daily lives. Drawing on theoretical perspectives as well as empirical research, the work provides insights into the Latino experience in both urban and rural locales. Each chapter is centred on the nexus between the immigrants' experiences in settling and adapting to new lives in the American South and the construction of transformed social, economic, political and cultural spaces.
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