Occupied America: A History of Chicanos, 9th edition

Published by Pearson (April 18, 2019) © 2020

  • Rodolfo F. Acuna California State University at Northridge

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For courses in history of Mexican Americans.

An authoritative introduction to Mexican American history

Occupied America: A History of Chicanos is among the most comprehensive introductory Chicano history texts available today. Author Rodolfo Acuña is one of the most highly regarded voices in Chicano history and ethnic studies. Engagingly written and extensively researched, the text covers Chicano history in its entirety. Timelines provide clear contexts for the most important events, illuminating today's struggles in the process.

The 9th Edition has been extensively updated, largely in light of the 2016 Presidential election and the “Age of Trump” and for better precision of language.

Hallmark features of this title

Accessible and engaging for students

  • The chronological organization clearly explains the evolution of Mexican Americans over time.
  • Two primary themes established in the text, the status of the American Empire and the inclusion of Indigenous People, provide a clear framework.

Covers inclusive topics

  • The author explores issues of gender throughout the text, with greater emphasis on notable women than in other texts.
  • The text discuses Central and Latin American immigration alongside Mexican immigration to provide a fuller picture of immigration to the US.
  • The author clearly distinguishes between political and economic refugees, providing a better understanding of each.

New and updated features of this title

  • UPDATED: Content throughout the text has been updated to better reflect the themes as they relate to post-Trump America.
    • Destruction of Civilizations-related content emphasizes the Indigenous history that has been erased and the myth that an advanced people took over a primitive people for religious salvation.
    • Discussion on the period between 1848 and 1900 is also included, specifically the colonization of Texas, New Mexico and California.
    • Colonization of the Colonizers explores how globalization, racism and Catholicism influenced Spain's imperial ambitions.
    • The author places a greater focus on the beginning and growth of American imperialism and the intertwined legacy of hate, particularly focusing on the invasion of Mexico.
    • Discussions of the Mexican Revolution and generational changes shed light on the differences between discrimination and racism, and how the former drives the latter. Discussions of World War I and its aftermath, the Great Depression, World War II and a decade of reaction are all included in detail.
  1. Not Just Pyramids, Explorers, and Heroes
  2. El Imperio Español
  3. Legacy of Hate: The Invasion of Mexico
  4. Occupied Texas
  5. The Colonization of New Mexico
  6. Sonora Invaded: The Occupation of Arizona
  7. California Lost: Image and Reality
  8. Immigration, Labor, and Generational Change
  9. The 1920s: Making America Great
  10. Mexican American Communities in the Making: The Tin Man Has No Heart
  11. World War II: The Betrayal of Promises
  12. “Happy Days”: Mexican American Communities under Siege
  13. Goodbye America: The Chicana/o in the 1960s
  14. The 1970s: The Resurgence of White Nationalism
  15. Blade Runner: Replicants are Illegal
  16. The Millennium: The Chickens Comes Home to Roost
  17. The Decline of the American Empire

About our author

Rodolfo F. Acuña is the founding chair of the Chicana/o Studies department at California State University at Northridge, the largest Chicana/o Studies Department in the United States with 27 tenured professors. He has authored 24 books, 3 of which received the Gustavus Myers Award for the Outstanding Book on Race Relations in North America and edited 4 volumes.

Acuña has received the prestigious John Hope Franklin Distinguished Scholar Award from Diversity in Higher Education, (2016), the National Hispanic Institute Lifetime Achievement Award, Austin, Texas, 2008, A Life Time Achievement Award from the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, 2010, the Distinguished Scholar Award from the National Association for Chicano Studies, the Emil Freed Award for Community Service, the National Association of Educators Humanitarian Award and the Founder's Award for Community Service from the Liberty Hill Foundation, among others. Black Issues in Higher Education selected Acuña one of the “100 Most Influential Educators of the 20th Century.”

His best-known books include Voices of the U.S. Latino Experience; Corridors of Migration: Odyssey of Mexican Laborers, 1600-1933 (winner of a CHOICE outstanding Academic Title Award); Occupied America: A History of Chicanos; Sometimes There is No Other Side: The Myth of Equality; Anything but Mexican: Chicanos in Contemporary Los Angeles; US Latinos: An Inquiry; Community Under Siege; The Sonoran Strongman and The Making of Chicana/o Studies: In the Trenches of Academe. Acuña has also published 3 children’s books and more than 200 academic and public articles, in addition to over 160 book reviews in academic journals and an interactive Student/Teacher Guide to Chicana/o Studies.

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