Tag: Latinos

A Borderlands View on Latinos, Latin Americans, and Decolonization Rethinking Mental Health


Free Download Pilar Hernández-Wolfe, "A Borderlands View on Latinos, Latin Americans, and Decolonization: Rethinking Mental Health"
English | 2015 | ISBN: 1442247754, 0765709317 | PDF | pages: 150 | 1.0 mb
Latinos in the U.S. and Latin Americans are a combination of diverse populations that differ on a range of factors including length of time in the country, migration background, ethnicity, geographical location, socio-economic status, and so on. The reader will find perspectives of those of us who live in the borderlands-that is, those of us whom Gloria Anzaldúa identified as Mestizas, who inhabit the intersticios, the spaces in between souls, minds, identities, and geographies. This book assists new generations of Latino/as and of those involved in Latino Culture and Latin America in understanding how the colonization of the Americas is still tied to current issues of migration from the South to the North and how mental health practices have been created and maintained from the wound of coloniality. It offers a rich and alternative foundation for approaching trauma, identity, and resilience through the integration of a decolonization paradigm, borderlands theory, and social justice approaches in couple and family therapy.

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Latinos in Pasadena


Free Download Roberta H Martinez, "Latinos in Pasadena"
English | 2009 | pages: 130 | ISBN: 1531645720, 0738569550 | EPUB | 40,9 mb
Histories of Pasadena are rich in details about important citizens, time-honored traditions, and storied enclaves such as Millionaires Row and Lamanda Park. But the legacies of Mexican Americans and other Latino men and women who often worked for Pasadena’s rich and famous have been sparsely preserved through the generations-even though these citizens often made remarkable community contributions and lived in close proximity to their employers. A fuller story of the Pasadena area can be provided from these vintage images and the accompanying information culled from anecdotes, master’s theses, newspaper articles, formal and informal oral histories, and the Ethnic History Research Project compiled for the City of Pasadena in 1995. Among the stories told is that of Antonio F. Coronel, a one-time Mexican Army officer who served as California state treasurer from 1866 to 1870 and whose image graced the 1904 Tournament of Roses program.

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