The Mexican American Summary

Improved Essays
1. FOR WHAT AUDIENCE WAS THE DOCUMENT WRITTEN?

a.The audience that it was written for were for Chicanos. Chicanos advocated nationalism and sovereignty for Mexican Americans. It was also to show awareness of the mistreatment that Mexican-Americans have had to endure from the “gringo” since being invaded by Europeans. “El Plan Espiritual de Aztlán,” brought a spirit to the Mexican-Americans to show a movement and unit as a race.

2. DOCUMENT INFORMATION (There are many possible ways to answer A-D.)

A. List three things the author said that you think are important:

a.Mexican-Americans wanted to be appreciated by the work they did in the farmers. The article was explaining they are the ones who plant the seeds, water the fields and gather crops. They 're the ones putting in long hours in the field and get no credibility for their hard work. If the Europeans gave them the respect they deserve they wouldn 't be complaining about being mistreated. People shouldn’t be putting long hours of work and get no
…show more content…
List two things the document tells you about life at the time it was written:

a.One of the thing I noticed by reading the article is that there was work abuse in the farm industry. Mexican-Americans complain that they weren 't treated with respect and Europeans got all the credit for the farming industry. It also didn 't help that their weren 't that many laws that protected the farmers from being taken of advantage. That 's the reason they implemented El Plan espiritual de Aztlan to set foundation for equal rights.

b.El Plan Espiritual de Aztlán was an important historical time in 1969. This gave Mexican-American to live the American dream they always wanted to. If you were Mexican-American you didn 't have the best education, laws to protect them, and economic program for them to run their business. Though they weren 't black they still have equal rights as white which it made it difficult for them to be successful in business

Related Documents

  • Decent Essays

    The Plan de San Diego Revolt was an occasion in the historical backdrop of south Texas that has for quite some time been known to students of history of Mexico and of the Mexican Revolution. Named for the Texas town where it was declared, the Plan called for Tejanos to ascend, reclaim Texas from the Anglos, and return it to Mexico . Benjamin Heber Johnson review, Revolution in Texas, approaches the Plan de San Diego Revolt from a totally alternate point of view. This is on account of, in his view, the brutality of 1914 and 1915 along the lower Rio Grande was really the appearance of more profound, more significant statistic and financial changes in the locale. These progressions agitate the predominant racial, social, political, and financial…

    • 479 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Great Essays

    Firstname Lastname Instructor’s Name Course Number 14 September 2015 The Battle of the Alamo The Alamo is the name given to an eighteenth century mission located in modern days San Antonio, Texas. Originally designed as a roman-catholic mission, the Alamo also served as a fortified structure whose original purpose was to withstand attacks by native American tribes.…

    • 1580 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This week’s readings discusses different aspects of the Mexican war. In “Mexican Views of the Mexican-American War discusses the origin of the war between Mexico and the United States, it states “To explain then in a few words the true origin of the war, it is to say that the insatiable ambition of the United States, favored by our weakness, caused it”, the weakness that it’s referring to is the Mexican government. Like we discussed on Thursday, Mexico has always had a chaotic government that contributed the loss of Mexican land. It can be lead to think that if Mexico had a secure government, the loss of the land wouldn’t have happened. Mariano Otero’s “Considerations Relating to the Political and Social Situation of the Mexican Republic in the Year 1847” relates to the previous reading because he explains the Mexican government and weak army contributed to the loss of…

    • 786 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    However, the author points out that Mesoamerican cultural traits and traditions have survived despite being forcefully dominated by western capitalist societies. The preservation and survival of the Mesoamerican way of life is largely attributed to the Mexico Profundo. On the other hand, the imaginary Mexico works to destroy the Mesoamerican way of life and to fill that void with western capitalism. After reading Batalla’s book, I have learned that the oppression of the Mexico Profundo still exists today. The internal forces of the imaginary Mexico and the external forces of western capitalism all work to subdue the Mesoamerican cultural identity.…

    • 1630 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In Ray Suarez’s book entitled Latino Americans he shares the rich history of Latinos who helped to shape the United States. Latino Americans share the personal success and struggles of what it means to be an immigrant and the obstacles they have faced. The book offers a rich history of immigration and certainly reflects present day events of the United States. It tells the story of how people from different regions and continents across the globe came to be one.…

    • 1230 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Massive amounts of native people swelled Cortes’s ranks in defiance of the Mexica tributary system. Up to 100,000 Tlaxcalans joined with Cortes when he marched on Tenochtitlan. Schwartz states that “such figures emphasizes the fact that in many ways the conquest of Tenochtitlan and the fall of the Mexica Empire was as much a struggle among indigenous peoples as it was a clash of the Old and New Worlds” (Schwartz 15). When the Spanish arrived, “the peoples of the Mexica did not form a single political entity, and these political and ethnic divisions contributed to the success” (Schwartz 23) of the military expedition. In order for the Spanish to take advantage of these divisions, they had to rely on past experience when dealing with native peoples.…

    • 1599 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Quest For A Homeland

    • 325 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The documentary Quest for a Homeland focuses on the way Mexican- Americans were united to remind the United States of a promise which was forgotten. During the time 1846 the United States declared war to Mexico. Yet, two years later Mexico had lost the war and signed a treaty. Texas, New Mexico, California, Arizona, Utah, part of Colorado and Wyoming had once belonged to Mexico. Overnight people lost their homes and some lost their lands.…

    • 325 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Symbolism In The Homeland

    • 948 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Many people see the U.S Mexico border as a marker of territory belonging to the U.S and the territory belonging to Mexico. However, to many others the border symbolizes and means much more than that. Gloria Anzaldua, Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz and Alejandro Lugo speak of these other meanings that many times are swept under the rug. In The Homeland, Aztlan from Borderlands: La Frontera, Gloria Anzaldua speaks of the differences between the experiences of people living on the U.S side of the border and of those that live on Mexico side of the border.…

    • 948 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This week, as we left class, Angylyne and I discussed the documentary, Precious Knowledge, all the way to the Armitage el stop where we parted ways. It was hard to believe that the education board of Arizona had such a problem with the Latin Studies Program. In high school, I took both AP US History and AP European History. In both of these courses, we learned about radical thinkers and doers and people who decided to revolt against the status quo. Both of these courses are fine for students to learn, it’s fine for us to learn about Napoleon and the American Revolution, so what makes the history of Latin American different?…

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Sandra Cisneros is the author of a short story entitled "Mericans”. It has a young female narrator is stuck in an “old world” culture. In this particular case it is a Mexican culture. The narrator does not seem to understand the traditions, this shows a rift between the children that are Mexican but are being brought up in America and their grandmother who has migrated here from Mexico. Ciseneros uses the setting and symbolism to create the theme of individualism conflicting with cultural traditions; the individual children show confusion when it comes to showing which culture they belong to.…

    • 1032 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In Chapter 4 of Mexicanos by Manuel G. Gonzales it talked about the American southwest of 1848-1900 in four different states: California, New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas. In California, after the Mexican American War, the Spanish –speaking society worsen. On January 24, 1848 gold was discovered by James Wilson Marshall and an employed carpenter named John Augustus Sutter in Coloma. In 1848, miners forced their way into the Sierra foothills, after a year the small stream became a huge spreading into territories. Out of the miners, the most successful were the Latin Americans from South America and Northern Mexico.…

    • 503 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Why Americans Won’t Do Dirty Jobs? People write all sorts of pieces for very different reasons. The way people write these papers and the factors that they add to them, make them effective to their readers. I analyzed an essay written by Elizabeth Dwoskin titled “Why Americans Won’t Do Dirty Jobs”. This specific essay was written to inform its reader about the problem with finding non-foreign workers to do painstaking jobs in America.…

    • 1057 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the analysis of the novel, The Adventure of Don Chipote or, When Parrots Breast-Feed by Daniel Venegas, it was of utmost importance to note Nicolás Kanellos put great effort into the circulation of said novel in Spanish and English. Kanellos, in his findings, contends that Spanish-language immigrant novels more accurately present the wickedness of American society such as the oppression of immigrant workers. Presumptuously, Kanellos could have felt so passionately about circulating this particular novel due to the fact that Venegas’ novel clearly represents the native in their homeland, the immigrant, and the exile cultures experienced in a foreign land. Don Chipote is a picaresque and satire novel that address the representation of the…

    • 1201 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Essay On Chicano Movement

    • 1357 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Chicano is a very common word in a Mexican American population dense area. Many say that the word Chicano is slang for Mexicano, and others say it’s a unique way to call those first-born Americans that come from Mexican parents. To historians and sociologists, the word “Chicano” was used for those who struggled between identifying themselves as Mexicans or as Americans. This word represents everything that we’ve overcome since WWII and before that. This word first came as a movement, The Chicano Movement, which fought for many of the same equal rights that African American’s were for.…

    • 1357 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In Sexual Violence in the politics and policies of conquest: Amerindian Women and the Spanish Conquest of Alta California by Antonia I. Castaneda she talks about how Amerindian women were treated by the Spanish soldier and the terrible thing they were put through. In The Collapse of the Missions by David J. Weber he talks about the horrible way Spanish soldier treated the Indians and how they tried to “civilize” the “savage Indians” and the struggle the Indians faced trying to stop this horrible act. In Gringos, Greasers and the Southwest: Evolving Chicano Identity on the Border Region, 1850-1930 by Michael R. Ornelas. He speaks about what affected the way Chicano saw themselves as what impacted their outlook of themselves and how that form the generation to come and their identity.…

    • 1316 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays