Boricua Power: A Political History of Puerto Ricans in the United StatesNYU Press, 01/03/2007 - 278 من الصفحات Where does power come from? Why does it sometimes disappear? How do groups, like the Puerto Rican community, become impoverished, lose social influence, and become marginal to the rest of society? How do they turn things around, increase their wealth, and become better able to successfully influence and defend themselves? |
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... skills to dance well in the jobs and cities they found in the United States. Their movements sometimes broke them down. The ironic, debilitating consequence of successful class struggle in the tobacco industry is one example. Then ...
... skills, with no future and with small wages. Not working means subsisting on a below-poverty income through public assistance or succumbing to the vagaries of the underground and illegal economies. The results are deprivation, jail, or ...
... skill and energy only with and through their partners.6 Social dancing shackles one dancer to another, good and bad. It also makes possible movements and freedom that could not be imagined otherwise. Marx turned Hegel back on his feet ...
... skill level, experience, and physical abilities. The requirements for the lead dancer, according to dance manuals, include “experimentally determining the follower's vocabulary and picking out from the subset of your possible leads the ...
... skills, legitimacy, and organizational unity” (Olsen 1970, 4). The most important contribution of social power theory was the idea that it is people that can make others move across the dance floor or the battlefield because they have ...
المحتوى
1 | |
14 | |
53 | |
The Rise of Radicalism World War II to | 96 |
Puerto Rican Marginalization | 129 |
The Young Lords the Media and Cultural Estrangement | 171 |
Conclusion | 210 |
Notes | 253 |
Bibliography | 265 |
Index | 275 |