Laura K. Munoz is Assistant Professor of History and Ethnic Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
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Description
"Focusing on Arizona from 1870 to 1940, Desert Dreams is a welcomed addition to foundational texts on Chicana/o education and more recent books on Latina/o teachers. . . .As such, it provides important correctives to an overlooked history of Mexican Americans' enduring struggles for quality education-making it a must-read for scholars of education, Chicana/o studies, Arizona, and the borderlands." (Western Historical Quarterly) "An elegant, deeply researched narrative that places Mexican American educators, families, and local leaders at the forefront of efforts challenging segregated schooling. Across generations, they sought civic integration through education, not just as individuals, but as Arizonenses. Desert Dreams is the first monograph to address the lives and legacies of Mexican American teachers whose classrooms ranged from one-room shacks to imposing brick structures. With nuance, respect, y corazon, Laura K. Munoz has crafted a milestone contribution in the history of education, Chicano/a history, and the borderlands." (Vicki L. Ruiz, author of From Out of the Shadows: Mexican Women in Twentieth-Century America)

