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About The Book
Description
Author
Wave upon wave of newcomers has penetrated the semiarid plains of the U.S.-Mexican borderlands. Among the settlers and sojourners along the Rio Grande in the mideighteenth century were the founders of Laredo who came seeking survival and permanence in that chaparral country.Established in 1755 as an outpost of New Spain Laredo like other borderlands towns has periodically been buffeted by powerful outside forces that upset the stable society and family unity characteristic of the early villa. Unlike some other border communities though it has maintained a prominent Mexican-American political and economic elite.Applying quantitative techniques of demographic analysis and interweaving their results with more traditional narrative Gilberto Miguel Hinojosa tells the story of a borderlands town and its people. He shows how larger events such as war economic depression and changes of sovereignty affected family structure racial and ethnic divisions social-class relations age composition of the population property ownership literacy and other aspects of the daily lives of the townspeople. His conclusions suggest that life in these communities was far from the static uneventful existence it was once believed to be.