「Chicano」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Chicano

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:89件

  • daily basis with increasing violence against Chicano activist groups.
  • He has also written extensively on Chicano and Native American thought.
  • hey supported Native American fishing rights, Chicano and Indian occupations of government land and
  • its current majority demographics of Latino, Chicano, and Central Americans.
  • (1st and 2nd generation of Mexican-American, Chicano and Latin-American) community across Californ
  • tello co-founded Goez Art Studio, "the first" Chicano art studio, with Jose Luis Gonzalez and Juan
  • nternet resource, to supply digital images of Chicano art from its extensive photographic collectio
  • hair (Northern California) for the exhibition Chicano Art: Resistance and Affirmation.
  • Front and was "arguably the most influential Chicano artist collective in the movement".
  • n of the Day of the Dead, when he, along with Chicano artist Gronk and a fеw othеrs lеd a processio
  • emon des Anges", a European Art Tour, with 16 Chicano Artists in Nante & Leon, France; Barcelona, S
  • ns stem to the mid to late 1960's, when local Chicano artists were becoming aware that they needed
  • It was founded in 2003 by noted Chicano author Luis J. Rodriguez, his wife Trini Rodr
  • Her debut was in the film Chicano Blood directed by Damian Chapa in 2007.
  • sn't generally known is that Gustav was not a Chicano, but a Sephardic Jew there to give support to
  • "As a Chicano by culture, I have a tendency to look around
  • went on to work for famed Arizonan and fellow Chicano Cesar Chavez, painting murals, banners and ot
  • Chicano Chant (1997 Reissue)
  • s Gail Wronsky and Suzanne Lummis; members of Chicano comedy and theater troupe Culture Clash; Nati
  • She addresses the fears of the Chicano community that Chicana feminists are being An
  • Chicano Connection 2009
  • It is one of the largest Chicano cultural arts buildings in the Southwest.
  • 1990 Chicano Cultural Representations: Reframing Alternati
  • The purpose of tortilla art is to reflect the Chicano cultural roots of the artist.
  • As Chicano culture received unprecedented attention in t
  • he San Francisco burrito in both bohemian and Chicano culture in San Francisco, as evidenced by an
  • rder, established him as a promising voice in Chicano fiction.
  • The gang asserts its influence over Chicano gangs throughout Southern California by threa
  • Esperanza Cordero, growing up in the Chicago Chicano ghetto.
  • role in the establishment and maintenance of Chicano identity.
  • Original members of El Chicano included Bobby Espinosa, Freddie Sanchez, Mic
  • El Chicano is an American Latin R&B/brown-eyed soul grou
  • es on the board of directors of the Minnesota Chicano Latino Affairs Council.
  • ssociation is composed of members of Mexican, Chicano, Latino and Meso-Native American Heritage.
  • SA website, it has "become a minor classic of Chicano literature and a core text in Latin studies p
  • al discomfort sometimes found in contemporary Chicano literature and concentrates instead on the mo
  • In 1978 I Work Kuen and the Chicano Marxist-Leninist organization August 29th Mov
  • and trade unionists participated in the many Chicano Moratoriums.
  • s created in conjunction with the rise of the Chicano Movement of the 1960s-1980s.
  • Not to be confused with the Chicano Movement activist, Oscar Zeta Acosta.
  • Quixote's Soldiers: A Local History of the Chicano Movement, 1966-1981 (Jack and Doris Smothers
  • s often considered one of the founders of the Chicano Movement.
  • ion of the Southern California Mural Arts and Chicano Mural Arts movement in the late 1960s, 1970's
  • ect until it became the largest collection of Chicano murals in the world.
  • niel Valdez and Lalo Guerrero, the "father of Chicano music."
  • basis for small businesses with a pronounced Chicano or Mexican-American heritage in the city.
  • ial issues: originally, Venceremos had been a Chicano organization, while the RU had a policy of su
  • Murals in Chicano Park
  • ey has been described, along with San Diego's Chicano Park and Los Angeles' Estrada Courts, as a le
  • 1978, by Jane Golden; Death of a Farmworker, Chicano Park, 1979, by Michael Schnorr and Susan Yama
  • gan Heights, San Diego) and small presence in Chicano Park.
  • the "dreams, desires, and aspirations" of the Chicano people.
  • ts to display the dreams and attitudes of the Chicano people.
  • uded notables such as the Latino soul band El Chicano, performance artist Paul McCarthy, comic book
  • Mayan Drifter: Chicano Poet in the Lowlands of America.
  • 997) - collaboration with a Los Angeles-based Chicano punk band
  • Deuce Mob are a Chicano Rap group from North Denver.
  • Chicano rapper Lil Rob samples "If I Was Your Girlfri
  • Gemini, also known as "Big Geminii", is a Chicano rapper born in Houston, Texas.
  • After spending 12 years with El Chicano, Regalado formed his own Latin Jazz All-Star
  • White and his acclaim for his coverage of the Chicano rights movement helped the station briefly ov
  • The album had mostly Jazz influences and Chicano rock songs that were all recorded in Spanish.
  • to Monogram Records, recording solo and with Chicano rock singer Chris Montez.
  • Mostly jazz influenced and Chicano rock songs, all ten songs were released promo
  • Los Angeles rock band, Los Lobos, performing Chicano rock and traditional Ranchera music.
  • ontez began recording for A&M in his previous Chicano rock style and personally suggested Montez sh
  • Ray Jimenez, (b. - ) was an East Los Angeles, Chicano rock and brown-eyed soul musician, prominent
  • as the first Latin rock band, hailing them as Chicano rock-gods.
  • Los Angeles lifestyles, the Klique car club, Chicano street barrio culture, and LA gang life.
  • American artist and an early proponent of the Chicano street arts movement.
  • arcon, Alicia, "Diane Rodriguez Has Taken the Chicano Struggle to New Places in Hollywood", La Opin
  • s a right, not a privilege: a program for the Chicano student struggle, and other articles.
  • There, he and his fellow Chicano students continued organizing protests.
  • AS traveled around to universities recruiting Chicano students who wanted to help increase Chicano
  • Her papers are housed at the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center.
  • He currently teaches in the Chicano studies and Art departments at the University
  • ed to UC Berkeley where he received his BA in Chicano studies as class of 1976.
  • cument outlines proposals for a curriculum in Chicano Studies, the role of community control in Chi
  • ACLU, the National Association of Chicana and Chicano Studies, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Noam Chomsky, Howar
  • t San Jose State University earning his MA in Chicano Studies.
  • 0 by the National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies.
  • He helped organize a group of Chicano teenagers, Young Citizens for Community Actio
  • camps of Delano now exploded into a national Chicano theater movement.
  • us, and was a leading actress for the seminal Chicano theatre group, El Teatro Campesino (Theater o
  • An enduring influence in Chicano theatre, she was born in the 1950s to America
  • ame Resident Fellows in Casa Zapata, a unique Chicano theme dormitory where approximately half of t
  • nts the Legends of Latin Rock," along with El Chicano, Tierra and Gregg Rolie (of Santana and Journ
  • Chicano U-Turn
  • He convened the first-ever Chicano youth conference in March 1969, which was att