They Came to Toil: Newspaper Representations of Mexicans and Immigrants in the Great Depression

They Came to Toil: Newspaper Representations of Mexicans and Immigrants in the Great Depression

by Melita M. Garza
They Came to Toil: Newspaper Representations of Mexicans and Immigrants in the Great Depression

They Came to Toil: Newspaper Representations of Mexicans and Immigrants in the Great Depression

by Melita M. Garza

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

As the Great Depression gripped the United States in the early 1930s, the Hoover administration sought to preserve jobs for Anglo-Americans by targeting Mexicans, including long-time residents and even US citizens, for deportation. Mexicans comprised more than 46 percent of all people deported between 1930 and 1939, despite being only 1 percent of the US population. In all, about half a million people of Mexican descent were deported to Mexico, a “homeland” many of them had never seen, or returned voluntarily in fear of deportation.

They Came to Toil investigates how the news reporting of this episode in immigration history created frames for representing Mexicans and immigrants that persist to the present. Melita M. Garza sets the story in San Antonio, a city central to the formation of Mexican American identity, and contrasts how the city’s three daily newspapers covered the forced deportations of Mexicans. She shows that the Spanish-language La Prensa not surprisingly provided the fullest and most sympathetic coverage of immigration issues, while the locally owned San Antonio Express and the Hearst chain-owned San Antonio Light varied between supporting Mexican labor and demonizing it. Garza analyzes how these media narratives, particularly in the English-language press, contributed to the racial “othering” of Mexicans and Mexican Americans. Adding an important new chapter to the history of the Long Civil Rights Movement, They Came to Toil brings needed historical context to immigration issues that dominate today’s headlines.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477314067
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 02/14/2018
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

A media historian and journalist, Melita M.Garza is a Pulitzer Prize nominee who has received awards from the Chicago Headline Club and the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. A former staff writer for Bloomberg news, the Chicago Tribune, Milwaukee Journal, and Los Angeles Times, she is currently an assistant professor of journalism at Texas Christian University’s Bob Schieffer College of Communication.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction. The Crisis: They Came to Toil . . . but They Could Not Stay
  • 1. 1929: To Pave a Way through Hostile and Barren Lands
  • 2. 1930: A Thousand Times Better Off with Mexican Labor
  • 3. 1931: The Tragedy of the Repatriated
  • 4. 1932-1933: A New Deal for American Pioneers
  • 5. Conclusion and Epilogue
  • Appendix
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

What People are Saying About This

Laura Hernández-Ehrisman

"A wonderful book. While this is not the first study of La Prensa’s regional and national significance, Garza offers a beautiful portrait of how, more than any other newspaper at the time, it documented the experiences of peoples of Mexican descent in the United States. I found this book quite readable and compelling."

Laura Hernández-Ehrisman

A wonderful book. While this is not the first study of La Prensa’s regional and national significance, Garza offers a beautiful portrait of how, more than any other newspaper at the time, it documented the experiences of peoples of Mexican descent in the United States. I found this book quite readable and compelling.

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