Milton Public Library

Beach Mexican, assimilation & identity in Redondo Beach, Alex Moreno Areyan

Label
Beach Mexican, assimilation & identity in Redondo Beach, Alex Moreno Areyan
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Beach Mexican
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Alex Moreno Areyan
Series statement
American heritage
Sub title
assimilation & identity in Redondo Beach
Summary
Alex Moreno Areyan's odyssey of growing up Latino in white upper-middle-class Redondo Beach in the 1950s presents a story of assimilation different from that experienced by Mexican Americans in larger barrios. His annual "white lie" to classmates was that his father got a job up north and the family was moving. They moved, all right--in a 1941 Plymouth with the harvest. In Marysville, Meridian and Mendota, they lived in tents and cars, under trucks and in corrugated tin hovels while picking cotton, tomatoes, peaches, walnuts and plums. The kid once threatened with permanent expulsion from Redondo Union High for speaking Spanish on campus eventually received a plaque from the City of Redondo Beach for writing the Mexican American history of the city. "Beach Mexican" proves the journey wasn't easy
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content