Does the achievement of economic equality in a multiethnic
society require the complete loss of a minority's cultural
identity? "Beyond Aztlan" argues that American society has
historically viewed a distinctive cultural identity as something
that an ethnic group gives up in order to achieve economic and
political parity. Mexican Americans, who have scored limited gains
in their struggle for equality since the 1940s, are proving to be
no exception to the rule. However, Barrera compares the situation
of Mexican Americans to that of minority groups in four other
countries and concludes that equality does not necessarily require
assimilation.
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