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  1. Oct 28, 2019 · She says people started using Latinx at the turn of the century, but its roots go back to the 1960s. “It’s a different iteration coming out of ethnic studies and social protest movements,” Guidotti-Hernández says. She says Mexican-American activists started using the terms “Chicano” and “Chicana” to identify themselves back then ...

  2. Most freestyle concerts and events in the United States are still successful, with many selling out, proving that the genre is still very much alive. 2012 and 2013 saw the coming up of teen Latin rappers, including a group from Texas called Sur Lado Entertainment that has produced ethnic Latin hip hop focused on Hispanic identity in the United ...

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    • 'Hispanic' Helps Unify Communities, Agenda
    • 'Latino' as Alternative to 'Hispanic'
    • Some Mexican-Americans Embrace 'Chicano'
    • 'Latinx' Emerges as Gender-Neutral Term

    The first time the federal government used the word Hispanic in a census was 1980. The appearance of the term was borne from decades of lobbying. “It took the debates of the 1970s, the protests of the late 1960s to get us to 1980,” explains G. Cristina Mora, a sociology professor at UC Berkeley and author of Making Hispanics: How Activists, Bureauc...

    While Hispanic may have utility, the term has been criticized for highlighting Spain, which colonized much of Latin America. Some have offered “Latino” as an alternative. This term refers to those from Latin America, meaning it includes Brazil but not Spain. The word existed long before the 1960s. But Ramón A. Gutiérrez, a Preston & Sterling Morton...

    For some Mexicans who shunned Latino and Hispanic, this meant turning to the word “Chicano.” There are a few theories about the origins of Chicano, including that it comes from mexicano (pronounced meshicano), a word that some “groups of Nahuas (Indigenous speakers of Nahuatl) began calling their language,” writes David Bowles, an author and profes...

    Spanish is a gendered language. If there is a group made up of women, they can be described as “ellas.” If there is a group with men and women, it defaults to the masculine (ellos instead of ellas). The word “Latino” follows this convention, labeling nouns as either masculine or feminine. For those who fall outside the gender binary, this word fail...

  4. Sep 30, 2020 · In an attempt to find a term that would be more inclusive, the word “Latinx” was born. It started being circulated in the mid-2000s within activist circles who used it to disrupt the gender binary and the default masculinity inherent in the Spanish language. While the word didn’t gain widespread usage at the time, it resurfaced after the ...

  5. In Los Angeles, Latin freestyle music was closely associated with the city’s burgeoning Chicano and Mexican American youth culture, which was inspired by the music and fashion of the 80s. These young Latinos used music as a way to express their pride in their cultural heritage and as a means of forging a new identity that was both Latino and ...

  6. Feb 13, 2015 · If you graduated from high school in the late '80s or early '90s and remember having your Firebird's T-tops down, the New York City breeze in your hair and K7's "Come Baby Come," C+C Music Factory's "Gonna Make You Sweat," or Nayobe's "Please Don't Go," blasting from your stereo's speakers, then you'll want to check out the upcoming documentary "Legends of Freestyle" directed by Steve Stanulis.

  7. Sep 15, 2023 · Mexico, in part as a way to displace Comanche peoples living there, initially welcomed US immigrants into its territory of Texas. But, with assistance from the US, Texas broke away from Mexico, forming its own republic. The ensuing US-Mexico War (1846–1848) resulted in heavy casualties and a massive loss of territory for Mexico, yielding much ...

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