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The Mexican Corrido: A Feminist Analysis [PDF]

open access: yesHispanic American Historical Review, 1991
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The Ancestry of Mexico's Corridos

Journal of American Folklore, 1963
ONE OF THE MOST perplexing problems which still confronts scholars interested in the Mexican corrido is the chronology of the genre's development. When in I939 Vicente T. Mendoza wrote his pioneer study, El romance espafol y el corrido mexicano; estudio comparativo,l he was of the opinion that "La elaboraci6n de nuestro corrido como forma definitiva ...
exaly   +2 more sources

“El Corrido Pensilvanio”

2023
The earliest recording of “El Corrido Pensilvanio” seems to be the one made by Pedro Rocha and Lupe Martinez in 1929, but the song was probably written several years earlier. During World War I (1914–18), the governments of the United States and Mexico formalized a policy referred to as “temporary admissions” in which American companies hired and ...
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A Corrido for Ann Weick

Affilia, 2014
If the life and works of Ann Weick could be put to music, the genre would be a border corridor. In Latin America, the corrido is a type of ballad that often extols the virtues, struggles, and accomplishments of a hero or heroine; border ballad tells the tales of bandits whose exploits are fuelled by the frustrations of class struggle and domination ...
Debora M. Ortega, Noel Busch-Armendariz
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The Corrido: A Border Rhetoric

College English, 2009
The border rhetorics that Latino/a students bring into the classroom can help them and other students resist being appropriated by academic discourse. For example, the corrido involves a mimicry of conventions that enables students to envision a fluid identity rather than exchange one identity for another.
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“Corrido de Kiansis”

2023
Many early corridos arose partially in response to the prejudice and discrimination that Mexican Americans faced from white Americans in the Southwest. Mexican American pride is particularly evidence in the “Corrido de Kiansis” (“Ballad of Kansas”) that was sung among Texans of Mexican descent, or Tejanos, beginning in the 1860s.
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