Publications
Cemeteries of Ambivalent Desire
Marie Theresa Hernández, Ph.D.
Growing up as the daughter of a funeral director in Fort Bend County, Texas, Marie Theresa Hernández was a frequent visitor to the San Isidro Cemetery, a burial place for Latino workers at the Imperial Sugar Company, based in nearby Sugar Land. During these years she acquired from her father and mother a sense of what it was like to live as an ethnic minority in Jim Crow Texas. Therefore, returning to the cemetery as an ethnographer offered Hernández a welcome opportunity to begin piecing together a narrative of the lives and struggles of the Mexican American community that formed her heritage.
Texas A&M University Press Consortium
Musica Tejana
Manuel Peña, Ph.D.
Texas-Mexican music, or musica tejana, is not one single music but several musical and musico-literary genres, ensembles, and their styles, encompassing the corrido, cancion, and what author Manuel Peña calls the corrido–cancion.
Brown, Not White
Guadalupe San Miguel, Ph.D.
Strikes, boycotts, rallies, negotiations and litigation marked the efforts of the Mexican origin community to oppose the discrimination in Houston schools in the early 1970’s. San Miguel identifies the important implications of this struggle for Mexican Americans and for public education.
Ethnicity in the Sunbelt
Arnoldo De Leon
A century after the first wave of Hispanic settlement in Houston, the city has come to be known as the “Hispanic Mecca of Texas.” Arnoldo De Leon’s classic study of Hispanic Houston, now updated to cover recent developments and a decade of additional scholarship, showcases the urban experience for Sunbelt Mexican Americans.
Urban-Speak: Poetry of the City
Ed. Sarah Cortez, M.A., M.S.
“...a new batch of Houston [student] writers explore life in poems that are gritty, throbbing, stubbornly triumphant creations that come from living in the nation’s fourth largest city.” - Collegium: the Magazine of the University of Houston, Spring 2002 The poetry in Urban Speak was composed by students who were enrolled in the “Latino Visions of the City” course.
Mexican American Odyssey
Thomas H. Kreneck, Ph.D.
In Mexican American Odyssey, Thomas H. Kreneck not only traces the influential life of Houston entrepreneur and civic leader Felix Tijerina as an individual but illustrates how Tijerina reflected many trends in Mexican American development during the decades he lived, years that were crucial for the Hispanic community today.



