“A bitter diversion”: Afro-Cuban immigrants, race, and everyday-life resistance
- 9 March 2017
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Science and Business Media LLC in Latino Studies
- Vol. 15 (1), 4-28
- https://doi.org/10.1057/s41276-017-0046-2
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- "What are You?": Explaining Identity as a Goal of the Multiracial Hapa MovementSocial Problems, 2009
- The New Face of Cubans in the United States: Cultural Process and Generational Change in an Exile CommunityJournal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, 2008
- Public categories, private identities: exploring regional differences in the biracial experienceSocial Science Research, 2006
- “Ser De Aquí”: Beyond the Cuban Exile ModelLatino Studies, 2003
- Inventing the Race: Latinos and the Ethnoracial PentagonLatino Studies, 2003
- White, Black, or Puerto Rican? Racial Self-Identification among Mainland and Island Puerto RicansSocial Forces, 2002
- Dominican-American Ethnic/ Racial Identities and United States Social CategoriesInternational Migration Review, 2001
- From Freedom Flotilla to America's Burden: The Social Construction of the Mariel ImmigrantsThe Sociological Quarterly, 1990
- the romance of resistance: tracing transformations of power through Bedouin womenAmerican Ethnologist, 1990
- Unwelcome Immigrants: The Labor Market Experiences of 1980 (Mariel) Cuban and Haitian Refugees in South FloridaAmerican Sociological Review, 1985