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- Title
Cultivating a Shared Sense of Place: Ethnic Mexicans and the Environment in Twentieth-Century Kansas City.
- Authors
Rast, Raymond W.
- Abstract
This article explores the history, employment, and presence of ethnic Mexicans in the Kansas City metropolitan area beginning in the early twentieth century through economic, political, and natural changes, highlighting their creation of a shared sense of place. Includes analysis of the impact of railroad and commerce development, residential layout and urban planning, the major flood of 1951, and the construction of freeways after the 1950s. Local community is revealed through oral histories, population data, and specific efforts including construction of an innovative neighborhood park, maintenance and style of homes, and the revitalization of Kansas City's Westside after the 1970s.
- Subjects
KANSAS City (Kan.); KANSAS; UNITED States; MEXICAN Americans -- Ethnic identity; FOREIGN workers; UNITED States emigration &; immigration; RAILROAD construction workers; MEXICAN American neighborhoods; FLOODS; EXPRESS highways; TWENTIETH century; HISTORY; SOCIAL history; 20TH century United States history
- Publication
Diálogo, 2018, Vol 21, Issue 1, p35
- ISSN
1090-4972
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1353/dlg.2018.0004