In 1965, striking farm workers in the San Joaquin Valley sparked the beginning of the Chican@ movement. As the movement quickly gained traction across the southwestern United States, public frictions emerged and splits among activists over strategic political decisions. José G. Izaguirre III explores how these disagreements often hinged on the establishment of a racial(ized) identity for Mexican Americans, leading to the formation of La Raza Unida, a political party dedicated to naming and defending Mexican Americans as a racialized community.
Through close readings of figures, vocabularies, and visualizations of iconic texts of the Chican@ Movement—including El Plan de Delano, Rodolfo “Corky” Gonzales’s “I Am Joaquin,” and newspapers like El Grito del Norte and La Raza—Izaguirre demonstrates that la raza was never singular or unified. Instead, he reveals a racial identity that was (re)negotiated, (re)invented, and (re)circulated against a Cold War backdrop that heightened rhetorics of race across the globe and increasingly threatened Mexican American bodies in the Vietnam War. In lieu of a unified nationalist movement, Izaguirre argues that activists energized and empowered La Raza as a political community by making the Chican@ movement multivocal, global, and often aligned with whiteness.
For scholars of political movements, US history, race, or rhetoric, Becoming La Raza will provide a valuable perspective on one of the most important civil rights movements of the twentieth century.
By:
José G. Izaguirre III
Imprint: Pennsylvania State University Press
Country of Publication: United States
Dimensions:
Height: 229mm,
Width: 152mm,
Spine: 25mm
Weight: 513g
ISBN: 9780271098753
ISBN 10: 0271098759
Series: Rhetoric and Democratic Deliberation
Pages: 270
Publication Date: 05 November 2024
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Further / Higher Education
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Active
List of Illustrations | ix Preface | xiii Acknowledgments | xix Introduction | 1 1. A De/Colonial Aesthetic: Whiteness and Mexican American Politics (1848–1965) | 25 2. A Poetics of Apathy: The Farmworkers’ Movement and El Plan de Delano (1966) | 42 3. A Poetics of Ambivalence: “I Am Joaquin” and the Year of La Raza (1967) | 68 4. A Poetics of Relationality: The Invention of a Global Raza (1968) | 105 5. A Poetics Otherwise: (Re)Bordering Mexican American Politics (1969) | 122 6. A Poetics of Deferral: La Raza, Ruben Salazar, and a Global Violence (1970) | 147 Conclusion | 181 Notes | 195 Bibliography | 215 Index | 237
José G. Izaguirre III is Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Colorado Boulder.
Reviews for Becoming La Raza: Negotiating Race in the Chican@ Movement(s)
“José G. Izaguirre III’s Becoming La Raza offers a much needed refreshing update to the study of Chicano movement rhetorics. Drawing on key rhetorical texts and informed by his own family history, he offers illuminating new insights that reflect not only historical trends but contemporary reverberations.” —Bernadette Calafell, coeditor of Negotiating Identity and Transnationalism: Middle Eastern and North African Communication and Critical Cultural Studies “José G. Izaguirre III offers readers a compelling racial rhetorical history of Chican@ movement(s) discourse by analyzing the aesthetics of canonical Chican@ texts. Becoming La Raza is riveting to read due to its forceful arguments about selected texts, engagement with cross-disciplinary literature, and nuanced analysis that reveals the racialization by and of Chican@s during the highly charged period of 1965–1970. This book is a must read for those interested in rhetoric, race, violence, social movements, and Chicana/o studies.” —Michelle A. Holling, co-editor of both Latina/o Discourse in Vernacular Spaces: Somos de Una Voz? and Race(ing) Intercultural Communication: Racial Logics in a Colorblind Era