Chicago Catolico: Making Catholic Parishes Mexican - Latinos in Chicago and Midwest (Paperback)
  • Chicago Catolico: Making Catholic Parishes Mexican - Latinos in Chicago and Midwest (Paperback)
zoom

Chicago Catolico: Making Catholic Parishes Mexican - Latinos in Chicago and Midwest (Paperback)

(author)
£18.99
Paperback 232 Pages / Published: 13/01/2020
  • We can order this from the publisher

Usually dispatched within 10-15 working days

  • This item has been added to your basket
Today, over one hundred Chicago-area Catholic churches offer Spanish language mass to congregants. How did the city's Mexican population, contained in just two parishes prior to 1960, come to reshape dozens of parishes and neighborhoods? Deborah E. Kanter tells the story of neighborhood change and rebirth in Chicago's Mexican American communities. She unveils a vibrant history of Mexican American and Mexican immigrant relations as remembered by laity and clergy, schoolchildren and their female religious teachers, parish athletes and coaches, European American neighbors, and from the immigrant women who organized as guadalupanas and their husbands who took part in the Holy Name Society. Kanter shows how the newly arrived mixed memories of home into learning the ways of Chicago to create new identities. In an ever-evolving city, Mexican immigrants and Mexican Americans' fierce devotion to their churches transformed neighborhoods such as Pilsen.The first-ever study of Mexican-descent Catholicism in the city, Chicago Catolico illuminates a previously unexplored facet of the urban past and provides present-day lessons for American communities undergoing ethnic integration and succession.

Publisher: University of Illinois Press
ISBN: 9780252084843
Number of pages: 232
Dimensions: 229 x 152 mm


MEDIA REVIEWS
"Chicago Catolico is the first book of its kind, a superb history of Mexican parish life in a city of diverse Catholic immigrants. Kanter relates a fascinating tale of faith, identity, and the transformation of a city's largest religious institution."-Timothy Matovina, author of Latino Catholicism: Transformation in America's Largest Church
"Chicago Catolico not only describes the faith practices of Mexican immigrants, but also explores the social worlds of Catholicism and the ways in which the Church helped mark neighborhoods, assist immigrants in their transitions to the frigid Midwest, and provide people a sense of home. This book is an important and timely contribution to the growing field of Latino religious history."-Felipe Hinojosa, author of Latino Mennonites: Civil Rights, Faith, and Evangelical Culture
"For Chicago history and urban history in general, Kanter's book provides consequential new insights about neighborhood change, ethnic progression and the role of religious institutions. This is a book about Mexicans and Mexican-Americans, but it is also a significant look at how Chicago works, and how American cities work." --Third Coast Review

You may also be interested in...

Elizabethans
Added to basket
£20.00   £10.00
Hardback
London and the Seventeenth Century
Added to basket
Thebes
Added to basket
£9.99
Paperback
The Five
Added to basket
£9.99   £7.99
Paperback
Murder: The Biography
Added to basket
Women, Race & Class
Added to basket
Radical Wordsworth
Added to basket
£10.99   £9.99
Paperback
Lady in Waiting
Added to basket
£9.99   £7.99
Paperback
Plague, Pestilence and Pandemic
Added to basket
Aston Martin
Added to basket
£9.99   £8.49
Paperback
Patch Work
Added to basket
£9.99
Paperback
Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race
Added to basket
The Address Book
Added to basket
£9.99
Paperback
Black and British: A short, essential history
Added to basket
The Shortest History of England
Added to basket
Dead Famous
Added to basket
£9.99
Paperback

Please sign in to write a review

Your review has been submitted successfully.