Event



Barrio America: How Latino Immigrants Saved the American City

- | Annenberg Room 110
Barrio America

Join us for this talk by Andrew Sandoval-Strausz, director of the Latina/o Studies Program and Associate Professor of History at Penn State University.  He is the author of Hotel: An American History, coeditor of Making Cities Global, and one of the leading historians of Latinx and transnational urban history.

For more on his new book, Barrio America, which is the subject of his talk, see: https://www.basicbooks.com/titles/a-k-sandoval-strausz/barrio-america/9781541697249/

The book recounts the compelling history of how Latino immigrants revitalized the nation’s cities after decades of disinvestment and white flight.

Thirty years ago, most people were ready to give up on American cities. We are commonly told that it was a “creative class” of young professionals who revived a moribund urban America in the 1990s and 2000s. But this stunning reversal owes much more to another, far less visible group: Latino and Latina newcomers.

Award-winning historian A. K. Sandoval-Strausz reveals this history by focusing on two barrios: Chicago’s Little Village and Dallas’s Oak Cliff. These neighborhoods lost residents and jobs for decades before Latin American immigration turned them around beginning in the 1970s. As Sandoval-Strausz shows, Latinos made cities dynamic, stable, and safe by purchasing homes, opening businesses, and reviving street life. Barrio America uses vivid oral histories and detailed statistics to show how the great Latino migrations transformed America for the better.

* This talk is co-sponsored by Penn's Center for the Study of Ethnicity, Race and Immigration; Department of City and Regional Planning; Department of History; Department of Sociology's Race, Ethnicity and Immigration workshop; Latin American and Latinx Studies Program; and Urban Studies Program.

We hope you can join us!