Image: Chicano Moratorium, 1970. Photo by George Rodriguez.
Nili Blanck: More than 100 Mexican-American works spotlight how Chicano graphic artists lift up the power of people.
Carlos Calbillo: The Chicano Movement in Houston and Texas: A Personal Memory.
Gab Chabran: A Brief History of Chicano Rock, From Funk Rock to Punk Rock (And a Firme Playlist).
Lori A. Flores:
- A Community of Limits and the Limits of Community: MALDEF’s Chicana Rights Project, Empowering the “Typical Chicana” and the Question of Civil Rights, 1974-1983.
- A Town Full of Dead Mexicans: The Salinas Valley Bracero Tragedy of 1963, the End of the Bracero Program, and the Evolution of California’s Chicano Movement.
Mario T. Garcia:
- Chicano movement walkouts remind us: We must fight for issues like gun reform.
- Raul Ruiz: To Be Chicano Was to Be an Activist. Raul Ruiz helped lead walkouts, edited La Raza, ran for office, and as a professor inspired generations of college students to pursue social justice.
Marita Hernandez: Chicano Movement: Generation in search of its legacy.
Juan Herrera: ¡La Lucha Continua! Gloria Arellanes and Women in the Chicano Movement.
Carren Jao: How Lincoln Heights’ Church of the Epiphany Energized the Chicano Movement.
KCET: Narrated Photo Essays:
- Maria Marquez Sanchez on the Two Sides of Her Activism.
- Oscar Castillo on La Raza’s Enduring Importance.
- Moctesuma Esparza on the Inter-Relationship of the Movements During the 60s and 70s.
- Joe Razo on the Self-Determination of the Chicano.
- The Chicano Moratorium.
Christopher Knight: ‘Phantom Sightings’ at LACMA.
Sonali Kolhatkar: Sustaining the Chicano Movement Across Generations.
The L.A. Times: The Chicano Moratorium: 50 Years Later.
- Gustavo Arellano: Reading Ruben Salazar: He was no radical. He was a prophetic reporter.
- Daniel Hernandez: A Loss of Innocence: It started as a peace march. But for the Moratorium generation, the day left protesters dismayed, disappointed and angry.
- Robert J. Lopez: Accident or assassination? A reporter’s years-long quest to find out how and why Ruben Salazar died.
- Vanessa Martínez & Julia Barajas: The Chicana Revolt: The women of the Brown Berets — Las Adelitas de Aztlán — break free and form their own movement.
- Carolina A. Miranda: A ‘catalytic moment’ for art and culture: In murals, theater, photography and music, the Chicano Moratorium influenced art of its time and our time too.
- Dorany Pineda: Ruben Salazar: The making of the myth. In death, he’s been made more radical than in life.
- Louis Sahagún: A Day of Rage in East L.A. Simmering anger over brutal policing, unequal education and racist neglect finally explodes.
Yolanda C. Leyva: Leyva on García, ‘Memories of Chicano History: The Life and Narrative of Bert Corona.’
Carolina A. Miranda: How ‘brown buffalo’ Oscar Acosta, best known as Hunter Thompson’s Dr. Gonzo, inspired his own TV doc.
Kinsee Morlan: Chicano Park’s History Could Fill a Museum.
NPR: Chicano Movement’s Denver Roots Run Deep.
Dorany Pineda: From ‘Chicano blowout’ to blowup: Turmoil over MEChA name change was decades in coming.
Sam Roberts: Reies Tijerina, 88, Dies; Led Chicano Property Rights Movement.
Louis Sahagún: East L.A., 1968: ‘Walkout!’ The day high school students helped ignite the Chicano power movement.
Gabriel H. Sanchez: These Pictures Capture The Raw Energy Behind The Chicano Movement.
Andrea K. Scott: The Glam Politics of a Chicano Collective from East L.A.
Hunter S. Thompson: Strange Rumblings in Aztlán.
Veterans of Hope: Rodolfo “Corky” Gonzales.
Wikipedia: