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    mexican history

    Explore " mexican history" with insightful episodes like "Episode #4 - Los campos de Georgia", "Episode #3 - Getting help from La Patria (Los braceros de Arkansas)", "Episode #2 - Mexicans school Mississippi", "Episode #1 - A time Mexicans lived as Europeans in New Orleans" and "Episode #0 - Meet Our Hosts" from podcasts like ""Nuestro South Podcast", "Nuestro South Podcast", "Nuestro South Podcast", "Nuestro South Podcast" and "Nuestro South Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (25)

    Episode #4 - Los campos de Georgia

    Episode #4 - Los campos de Georgia

    In the 1960s through 1980s, millions of Latinos started traveling through the South as migrant farmworkers. Daisy has some personal experience with this since she grew up in a rural area and worked in the packing sheds before she became a college student. But the crazy thing is that unlike when we were kids, the South was really not that anti-immigrant back then. The white folks were both conservative and pro-immigrant (we found it hard to picture, too). In today’s episode, we meet Israel Cortez, who came to Georgia as a migrant worker during that time and worked hard to “fit in.” We totally get it. Do you? - This podcast is produced by Ricky Hurtado, Erik Valera, and Julie Weise, with generous sponsorship from the Whiting Foundation, the University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences, and Latinx Ed. Edited by Dorian Gomez.

    To learn more, check out:
    https://corazondedixie.org/chapter-4/


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    Episode #3 - Getting help from La Patria (Los braceros de Arkansas)

    Episode #3 - Getting help from La Patria (Los braceros de Arkansas)

    Back in the 1950s, hundreds of thousands of Mexican men came to Arkansas to pick cotton, on contracts negotiated by the Mexican and U.S. governments. Today we meet Angel Cano, a licenciado Mexico sent over to protect them from wage theft, discrimination, and other troubles. Señor Cano even had some success, some of the time. It seems crazy to us that these migrantes trusted their patria enough to ask for help all the way from Arkansas. Qué opinas? - This podcast is produced by Ricky Hurtado, Erik Valera, and Julie Weise, with generous sponsorship from the Whiting Foundation, the University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences, and Latinx Ed. Edited by Dorian Gomez.


    To learn more about Mexicanos in Arkansas 1940s-60s, check out: https://corazondedixie.org/chapter-3/


    Subscribe to this channel for new podcast episodes

    iTunes:
    https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nuestro-south-podcast/id1461953381

    Spotify:
    https://open.spotify.com/show/1JYcA8LGDcpnO04HHRkxfE

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    Episode #2 - Mexicans school Mississippi

    Episode #2 - Mexicans school Mississippi

    You may think Mississippi was all black and white back in the day, but n’ombre - our gente were there too! Today we meet Rafael Landrove: A Mexican sharecropper in 1920s Mississippi who came from Mexico, called himself Cuban, and fought to send his kids to the white school. Our parents fought for our education in the South, too, but in a different way. What about yours? - This podcast is produced by Ricky Hurtado, Erik Valera, and Julie Weise, with generous sponsorship from the Whiting Foundation, the University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences, and Latinx Ed. Edited by Dorian Gomez.


    To learn more about Mexicanos in Mississippi 1910s-30s, check out: https://corazondedixie.org/chapter-2/

    Subscribe to this channel for new podcast episodes

    iTunes:
    https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nuestro-south-podcast/id1461953381

    Spotify:
    https://open.spotify.com/show/1JYcA8LGDcpnO04HHRkxfE

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    http://instagram.com/nuestrosouth
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    Episode #1 - A time Mexicans lived as Europeans in New Orleans

    Episode #1 - A time Mexicans lived as Europeans in New Orleans

    Vamos a New Orleans, nearly 100 years ago. Mexican immigrants arrived there by boat. Many, like a man named Robert Canedo, were able to “blend in” to whiteness -- something we couldn’t imagine being able to do today. Or could we?  - This podcast is produced by Ricky Hurtado, Erik Valera, and Julie Weise, with generous sponsorship from the Whiting Foundation, the University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences, and Latinx Ed. Edited by Dorian Gomez.


    For more information on Mexicanos in New Orleans in the 1910s-30s: 
    https://corazondedixie.org/chapter-1/

    Subscribe to this channel for new podcast episodes

    iTunes:
    https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nuestro-south-podcast/id1461953381

    Spotify:
    https://open.spotify.com/show/1JYcA8LGDcpnO04HHRkxfE

    Follow us:
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    http://instagram.com/nuestrosouth
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    https://twitter.com/nuestrosouth
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    Episode #0 - Meet Our Hosts

    Episode #0 - Meet Our Hosts

    Hey y'all, we are Nuestro South!

    So you will be hearing a lot of us throughout these episodes so we might as well introduce ourselves! 

    We are Daisy, Bryan, and Axel. Somos Latinos...Latinas...Latinxs, and we grew up in the South. Over the course of our series, we’ll discuss family, food, school, and our personal experiences of growing up in the south. In this episode, you will hear about Axel's love for conchas, Daisy's crush on Tony Stark, and Bryan's efforts in learning French to be trilingual.  Together we create a space that attempts to make sense of the past, present, and future of our people in the south. This is for us y'all! - This podcast is produced by Ricky Hurtado, Erik Valera, and Julie Weise, with generous sponsorship from the Whiting Foundation, the University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences, and Latinx Ed. Edited by Dorian Gomez.

    Subscribe to this channel for new podcast episodes

    iTunes:
    https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nuestro-south-podcast/id1461953381

    Spotify:
    https://open.spotify.com/show/1JYcA8LGDcpnO04HHRkxfE

    Follow us:
    Instagram:
    http://instagram.com/nuestrosouth
    Twitter:
    https://twitter.com/nuestrosouth
    Facebook:
    https://www.facebook.com/NuestroSouth/