Latino, and so on. Each term’s use comes down to individual identity and preference. This may be why the use of the terms Hispanic, Chicano, Latino, Latin American, or Latinx can be confusing—even for an American whose parents come from a Latin American or Spanish-speaking country. In ...
The terms Latino, Hispanic and Latinx are often used interchangeably to describe a group that makes up about 19 percent of the U.S. population. While it’s now common to use umbrella terms to categorize those with ties to more than 20 Latin American countries, these words haven’t always ...
(2001): Hispanic, Latino, Chicano, or „Other"?: Deconstructing the Relation- ship between Historians and Hispanic-American Educational History. In: History of Educa- tion Quarterly 41, S. 365-413.Macdonald, Victoria-Maria. "Hispanic, Latino, Chicano, or `Other'?: Deconstructing the ...
Victoria-María MacDonald, “Hispanic, Latino, Chicano, or ‘Other’?: Deconstructing the Relationship between Historians and Hispanic-American Educational History,” History of Education Quarterly 41 (fall 2001): 410–411.MacDonald, V.-M. (2001): Hispanic, Latino, Chicano, or „Other"?: ...
RACE/ETHNICITY; Hispanic sights, sounds sweep cities and prairie; The Chicano-Latino community, which grew 166 percent, wields influence not just in the metro area but in many smaller communities statewide.(NEWS)Drew, Duschere Paul