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A Latino memoir : exploring family, identity and the common good / Gerald Poyo.
Van Pelt Library CT275.P769 A3 2019
Available This item is available for access.
- Format:
- Author/Creator:
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
-
- Poyo, Gerald Eugene, 1950-.
- Poyo, Gerald Eugene, 1950---Family.
- Poyo (Family).
- Poyo, Gerald Eugene, 1950---Travel--America.
- Hispanic Americans--Biography.
- Hispanic American families.
- Transnationalism.
- Emigration and immigration.
- Social aspects.
- United States--Emigration and immigration--Social aspects.
- United States.
- Latin America--Emigration and immigration--Social aspects.
- Emigration and immigration--Social aspects.
- Families.
- Hispanic Americans.
- Travel.
- America.
- Latin America.
- Genre:
-
- Biographies.
- Physical Description:
- xv, 335 pages ; 22 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Houston, Texas : Arte Público Press, [2019]
- Summary:
-
- "In a bumpy, anxiety-producing plane ride across the Straits of Florida to Cuba in 1979, graduate student Gerald Poyo knew his life would either end that day in the World War II-era prop airplane or change forever. He survived the trip, and his ten-day visit solidified his academic research and confirmed his career as a history professor. In this wide-ranging examination of his relatives' migrations in the Western Hemisphere -- the Americas -- over five generations, Poyo uses his training as a historian to unearth his family's stories. Beginning with his great-great grandfather's flight from Cuba to Key West in 1869, this is also about the loss of a beloved homeland. His father was Cuban; his mother was from Flint, Michigan. Poyo himself was six months old when his parents took him to Bogotá, Colombia. He celebrated his eighth birthday in New Jersey and his tenth in Venezuela. He was 12 when he landed in Buenos Aires, where he spent his formative years before returning to the United States for college. 'My heart belonged to the south, but somehow I knew I could not escape the north,' he writes. Transnationalism shaped his life and identity. Divided into two parts, the first section traces his parents and ancestors as he links their stories to impersonal movements in the world -- Spanish colonialism, Cuban nationalism, United States expansionism -- that influenced their lives. The second half explores how exile, migration and growing up a 'hemispheric American, a borderless American' impacted his own development and stimulated questions about poverty, religion and relations between Latin America and the United States. Ultimately, this thought-provoking memoir unveils the universal desire for a safe, stable life for one's family"-- Provided by publisher.
- "In a bumpy, anxiety-producing plane ride across the Straits of Florida to Cuba in 1979, graduate student Gerald Poyo knew his life would either end that day in the World War II-era prop airplane or change forever. He survived the trip, and his ten-day visit solidified his academic research and confirmed his career as a history professor. In this wide-ranging examination of his relatives' migrations in the Western Hemisphere -- the Americas -- over five generations, Poyo uses his training as a historian to unearth his family's stories. Beginning with his great-great grandfather's flight from Cuba to Key West in 1869, this is also about the loss of a beloved homeland. His father was Cuban; his mother was from Flint, Michigan. Poyo himself was six months old when his parents took him to Bogot�a, Colombia. He celebrated his eighth birthday in New Jersey and his tenth in Venezuela. He was 12 when he landed in Buenos Aires, where he spent his formative years before returning to the United States for college. 'My heart belonged to the south, but somehow I knew I could not escape the north,' he writes. Transnationalism shaped his life and identity. Divided into two parts, the first section traces his parents and ancestors as he links their stories to impersonal movements in the world -- Spanish colonialism, Cuban nationalism, United States expansionism -- that influenced their lives. The second half explores how exile, migration and growing up a 'hemispheric American, a borderless American' impacted his own development and stimulated questions about poverty, religion and relations between Latin America and the United States. Ultimately, this thought-provoking memoir unveils the universal desire for a safe, stable life for one's family"-- Provided by publisher.
- Contents:
-
- Bygone generations
- Struggled in radical ways
- A sense of ambiguity
- Better forgotten
- Aligning north
- Americanization
- Of economic necessity
- An unexpected turn
- Corporate foot soldiers
- Children fuse cultures easily
- The world isn't fair
- Fixing the world
- Turmoil of ethnic politics
- Pressure cooker
- Pilgrimage
- Inscribing a maligned people
- No longer home
- The worst of times
- Bread, spirit and community
- We shared a sign of peace.
- Other Format:
- Online version: Poyo, Gerald Eugene, 1950- A Latino memoir.
- ISBN:
-
- 9781558858794
- 1558858792
- OCLC:
- 1112138839
- Publisher Number:
- 99983088346
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