Abstract

The story of the quest for Mexican American civil rights has yet to be fully and convincingly told. Despite some excellent studies about disparate aspects of the struggle for full inclusion in the United States, we lack a synthesis that brings all these efforts together into a coherent interpretation. In particular, the crucial questions about when and how the drive for Mexican American civil rights began and the nature of the ideologies and leaders that propelled the movement remain subjects of debate. One school of thought locates the origins of civil rights agitation in the middle decades of the twentieth century, emphasizing the role of the reformist middle-class leadership of the Mexican American generation of the 1930s to 1950s.1 Among those who challenge this view and posit a more radical working-class genesis is labor historian Zaragosa Vargas.2 In Labor Rights Are Civil Rights, Vargas not only masterfully synthesizes two critical decades-the 1930s and 1940s-in the labor history of Mexican Americans, but he also gives them a bold new significance: the post-World War II civil rights activism that gave rise to the modern Chicano movement was rooted in the seedbed of labor strife as workers fought to improve miserable wages and working conditions in unskilled agricultural and industrial jobs during the 1930s and 1940s. The New Deal and World War II presented unique conditions that opened new opportunities for Mexican Americans to push for economic, social, and political equality in unprecedented ways; this is where it all began. Important books are provocative-they teach us new things, open new conversations, and point the way to new research. Labor Rights Are Civil Rights does all of this. Among its many virtues, two especially stand out. First, Vargas's book presents a nuanced treatment of Mexican American labor history of the 1930s and 1940s that reveals new insights about its multi-faceted

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