There is race trouble at the beginning of every school year. During one incident, the police arrive to break up a fight, the whites leave without a problem and the Mexicans arrested or expelled. Luis's mother is finally fed up with pulling him out of jail and watching him in trouble, and kicks him out of the house.…
One main point that the movie points out is the fact that the Hispanic students in Los Angeles high schools were punished physically if they were caught speaking Spanish, even if some students didn’t speak English properly and 100% of the school population was Spanish-speaking.…
This movie is about a young, white man named Jimmy Smith, Jr. who longs to be a rapper. His nickname is Bunny Rabbit. Not only is he from a poor, low class family, but he lives in a predominately black neighbourhood in Detroit. He lives in a trailer with is mom and little sister. Every day is a struggle for him to keep his hope alive.…
I was wondering how the birth of Chicano Studies started and reading the “The Birth of Chicano Studies” had given me a better understanding of the history of Chicano history. As I was reading, I figured that Chicano Studies wasn’t implemented in the public or college schools because at that time Mexican-Americans weren’t given equal right. While reading this article I started question myself and asking questions; what caused the great movement for us to Chicano Studies in your schools.…
The first point I noticed in this movie was that when the Mexicans first disappeared people seemed to be happy and excited that they were finally gone for good, or at least that’s how it was originally supposed to be, and at the same moment of the disappearance, a mysterious fog rose up around the state of California.…
According to the Registry the film was “ one of the most popular of a new wave of narrative feature films produced in the 1980s by Latino filmmakers" & "celebrates in a direct, approachable, and impactful way, values of self-betterment through hard work and power through knowledge."…
The movie is addressed by a fifth grader named Mayra. Mayra is nine years old and leads the camera around her school and around her single bedroom house that she shares with three of her family members. She lives with her mother and uncle, both being undocumented immigrants from El Salvador. Mayra is worried about the ramifications of being kicked out of school and if she was going to be deported. She talks about the impacts that Prop. 187 have on her and other kids at the school. The stories and voices of Mayra and other students demonstrate the lack of awareness, compassion, and racism that exists at Hoover.…
The filmmaker shows the progress of SNCC, and SCLC, and the Civil Rights Movement, as they fought for equality in the United States. As a whole they met nonviolent, and hostile hurdles, but persevered all obstacles to defeat segregation and earn…
The video we saw during class was interesting and it caught my attention since I can relate to what was being said. There was talk about Hispanic Americans and how each generation lived differently. But the main thing I took from the video was the idea of America being an international country; a nation of immigrants. However we must be careful to not assimilate into the masses to the point where we completely forget our heritage. It is our very heritage and culture which contribute to the country which makes our nation an international nation.…
In summation to this reflection upon this movie/ documentary and article we should all as teachers try to strive to help our students look at each other equally and treat them with the same respect, and by providing this lesson of no discrimination to our students. This will hopefully inspire a future were anyone regardless of what their skin color or their ethnicity can feel powerful and just as important as the people that surround…
During this time the presences of Chicanos lacked and when they did make a presence in a film the roles they filled were very much of those of gangs, people being accused of crimes and so on. The other thing that this group argued was that the roles that were very much using the typical stereotyping of the Chicanos (Salvador Treviño…
The term Chicano was a word used as a derogatory remark to identify Mexican- Americans of low social class. It wasn’t until the 1960’s when the term Chicano became popular during the Chicano Movement. Chicano was mainly popular among students who performed walkouts, teachers, and farm workers. It was until then that Mexican- Americans took pride of the term that was once a negative remark. Till this day, Mexican- Americans have many alternative identification terms they could adopt like; Hispanic, Chicano, Latino, among others. But the real question is what Chicano means in a cultural, economic, and educational perspective. More importantly, what the term Chicano means to me. Which is what I will be analyzing today with the help of various…
The movie I’m going to focus on is Baby Boy. Baby Boy is a movie by John Singleton set in California and focusing on a young black man named Jody and the struggles he faces in everyday life. I chose this movie because I can kind of relate to the story being that I’m from California and I’ve seen a lot of the situations presented in the movie. Jody is in his early twenties and has two kids by two different women, Yvette and Peanut. He still lives with his mother and acts like he is still a kid, hence the name of the movie Baby Boy. Yvette considers Jody to be her man but he’s still messing around with his other baby mama Peanut, along with numerous other women. Jody and Yvette are constantly arguing about his infidelity and his unwillingness to step up and be a man and move out of his mother’s house, where there is also an ongoing issue because his mother has just moved in her new boyfriend and Jody feels threatened by this. His wants to command the attention of his mother and act like he is the man of the house even though he doesn’t take on any responsibilities as far as getting a job and paying any bills or fixing anything. So the movie is basically about Jody’s quest to become a man while dealing with the everyday struggles that affect him in the rough streets of California.…
When someone has stabbed you in the back the only logical thing at the time is to stab them back but in all reality this will accomplish nothing. Everyone knows misery loves company and revenge is the perfect partner. Most of the time it takes others to show you the good things in life that make that one bad one seem less severe that it doesn't matter. In the movie "The Count of Monte Cristo", Edmund Dantes (Jim Caviezel) must go through trial and tribulations as he learns the biggest lesson of his life.…
Erin the main protagonist, a new excited school teacher comes at ‘Woodro Wilson High school’ in long beach to teach the students. It is 1994 in long beach California, idealist Erin Gruwell is just starting her first teaching job, that as freshman and sophomore English teacher at Woodro Wilson High School. Which two years earlier, implemented a voluntary integration program. This movie begins with scene from the 1992 ‘Los Angeles riot, which is known as the Rodney King Riots. It was the south central riots, the 1992 los angels Civil Disturbance and Civil Unrest. It was a race riot and the subsequent looting. Erin was very happy to teach the students but her enthusiasm is quickly challenged, when she realizes her classes are all ‘at-risk’ students and not the eager students she was expecting. She is unprepared for the nature of the classroom, whose students live by generation of strict moral codes of protecting their own at all cost. Many are in gang and almost all know somebody that has been killed by gang violence .They hate each other. Her students believe themselves brave soldiers in some war. The only person the students hate more is Mrs. Gruwell. It is not until hold an unsanctioned discussion about a recent drive by shooting death that she fully begins to understand what she is up against. And it is not until she provides an assignment of writing, a daily journals, which will be not graded, and…