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Brown tide rising: metaphors of Latinos in contemporary American public discourse
Otto Santa Ana
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Frontmatter
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Foreword by Joe R. Feagin (page xi)
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Preface (page xv)
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Acknowledgments (page xix)
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1. Why Study the Public Discourse Metaphors Depicting Latinos? (page 1)
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PART I: THEORY AND METHOD (page 13)
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2. How Metaphor Shapes Public Opinion (page 15)
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PART II: ANALYSES (page 63)
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3. Proposition 187: Misrepresenting Immigrants and Immigration (page 65)
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4. Proposition 209: Competing Metaphors for Racism and Affirmative Action (page 104)
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5. Student as Means, Not End: Contemporary American Discourse on Education (page 156)
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6. American Discourse on Nation and Language: The "English for the Children" Referendum (page 197)
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PART III: CONCLUSIONS (page 251)
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7. Disease or Intruder: Metaphors Constructing the Place of Latinos in the United States (page 253)
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8. Insurgent Metaphors: Contesting the Conventional Representation of Latinos (page 295)
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Appendix: Tallies of Political Metaphors (page 321)
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Notes (page 333)
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References (page 365)
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Permissions Acknowledgments (page 393)
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Index (page 395)
Citable Link
Published: 2003
Publisher: University of Texas Press
- 9780292777668 (hardcover)
- 9780292777675 (paper)