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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... social act is an exercise of power, every social relationship is a power equation, and every social group or system ... structure, a possession, a finite object like gold that can be held, lost, or taken from others. Power, in this sense ...
... social structures (Berger 1995, 4)? The general answer to these questions is that Puerto Ricans, like any other group, gained and lost power by taking steps, making advances, engaging others, and, in general, by becoming active partners ...
... social action and experience. These processes create structures and institutions. Interests and passions reside there and encode behavior. Efforts to amass power that ignore this fact succeed, in general, by accident. By illuminating ...
... social agents and social structures in a complex dialectic that reveals how power emerges, changes, and disappears. It does so by a focus on interests, structures, and the consensus and agreement between partners involved in a dance ...
... social structures. Bad grades hurt because of “the mediation of human beings situated outside the classroom,” people who are capable of denying the student opportunities for employment or further education (1990, 145). Though true, this ...
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 |