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OverviewAllentown, Pennsylvania, is a small city located along the Lehigh River in the eastern part of the state. Once the hiding place of the Liberty Bell, Allentown has become a popular destination for Latino immigrants. These Latinos, mostly from Puerto Rico, now make up about a quarter of the city's population, and their numbers continue to grow. The thirty-one stories collected in The New Face of Small-Town America do not reflect the reality of Allentown alone. With U.S. Census figures showing the arrival of Latinos in more small American cities than ever before, Allentown will continue to serve as an example. These small cities have already experienced, or are about to experience, the transformation Allentown saw. Few communities embrace such change. It is only when one becomes familiar with a foreign concept (or foreigners) that fear disappears and understanding begins. Edgar Sandoval's essays show that behind the accents, ethnic customs, and other cultural differences exists a common humanity with universal problems and dreams. The Latinos profiled here want what everybody else wants: to fit in, to prosper, to offer their children a better future, to be recognized as important members of society by the mainstream. They want to coexist. These stories are not just about Latinos in Allentown, after all; they are about Latinos everywhere. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Edgar Sandoval (Staff Writer, New York Daily News)Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press Imprint: Pennsylvania State University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9780271036748ISBN 10: 0271036745 Pages: 168 Publication Date: 20 August 2010 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsContents Preface Acknowledgments 1. The Ritual 2. A Principal Duty 3. Spanish Sound Bites 4. Home Away from Home 5. Little Hero 6. Music to Their Ears 7. Priceless 8. The Fearful Side of Business 9. Side by Side 10. Blatinos 11. Julio 12. Colorful Pages 13. ABCs 14. Grading the Parents 15. Latino Medicine 16. Hooked on Telenovelas 17. A Step Behind 18. City Boys 19. Spanglish 20. The World Trade Connection 21. Latinos Again 22. One Man, One Mission 23. Down to Business 24. Airwave Wars 25. Goooaaalll!!! 26. Unfulfilled Dreams 27. A Rich Life 28. Liberty and Justice for All 29. Man of the Cross 30. Full Circle 31. Finding the Inner Snowman Appendix IndexReviewsThe author presents many interviews from all sides of the cultural challenges and gives readers a sense of how life has been modified and improving in recent years in this community. --Al Holliday, Pennsylvania Magazine The New Face of Small-Town America offers vivid portraits of the people and families behind the demographic statistics, revealing a little-known aspect of contemporary immigration: far from the big cities and the border towns, in small inland settlements often written off as victims of deindustrialization, Latinos are restoring public life, renewing entire communities, and working hard to build a new urban future for our pluralist democracy. Andrew K. Sandoval-Strausz, University of New Mexico The New Face of Small-Town America offers vivid portraits of the people and families behind the demographic statistics, revealing a little-known aspect of contemporary immigration: far from the big cities and the border towns, in small inland settlements often written off as victims of deindustrialization, Latinos are restoring public life, renewing entire communities, and working hard to build a new urban future for our pluralist democracy. --Andrew K. Sandoval-Strausz, University of New Mexico The author presents many interviews from all sides of the cultural challenges and gives readers a sense of how life has been modified and improving in recent years in this community. --Al Holliday, Pennsylvania Magazine The New Face of Small-Town America offers vivid portraits of the people and families behind the demographic statistics, revealing a little-known aspect of contemporary immigration: far from the big cities and the border towns, in small inland settlements often written off as victims of deindustrialization, Latinos are restoring public life, renewing entire communities, and working hard to build a new urban future for our pluralist democracy. --Andrew K. Sandoval-Strausz, University of New Mexico In the tradition of Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickeled and Dimed, Eric Schlosser's Fast Food Nation, and Isabel Valle's Fields of Toil, Edgar Sandoval's accounting of Latinos in Allentown is not just a set of stories worthy of coverage; it's a window into how public sociology is emboldened by reading those who live, eat, and breathe in the communities they cover. Sandoval's stories are a form of knowledge that should be neither dismissed nor discounted. --Ronald Mize, Social Forces Author InformationEdgar Sandoval is an award-winning journalist who spent almost three years writing about the Latino community of northeastern Pennsylvania. He has been a staff reporter at several newspapers, including the McAllen Monitor, the Allentown Morning Call, the Los Angeles Times, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, and the New York Daily News, where he is currently employed. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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