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Summary of Puerto Rican Migration; C.E. Rodriquez. Entromundos; I.
Zavala-Martinez. Maternal and Child Health and Health Care in
Puerto Rico; P.J. Santiago-Borrero, M. Valcarcel. Acquired Immune
Deficiency Syndrome in Women and Children in Puerto Rico; C.
Zorrilla, et al. Demographic and Health Characteristics of Puerto
Rican Mothers and Their Babies; S.J. Ventura. Characteristics of
Childbearing Hispanic Women in New York City; S. Lederman, D.
Sierra. HIV Infection and AIDS Among Women; B. Kilbourne, et al.
Physical Growth, Sexual Maturation, and Obesity in Puerto Rican
Children; R. Martorell, et al. The Cultural Context of Adolescent
Childrearing in Three Groups of Urban Minority Mothers; G.
Wasserman, et al. The Cognitive, Behavioral, and Health Status of
Mainland Puerto Rican Children in the Infant Health and Development
Program; G. McCarton, et al. Distinguishing Among Proficiency,
Choice, and Attitudes in Questions About Language for Bilinguals;
K. Hakuta. 4 additional articles. Index.
Julio Morales describes the Puerto Rican nation as being comprised
of those individuals who identify themselves as Puerto Ricans. This
includes almost 6. 2 million people who live primarily, but not
exclu sively, on the island of Puerto Rico, and in the northeastern
United States. One gets to be a Puerto Rican by various means. You
are Puerto Rican if you are born in Puerto Rico, although at the
same time you are an American because you were born there. You are
Puerto Rican if your parents are Puerto Rican, even if you have
never visited the island, have never eaten arroz y habichuelas, and
have never spoken a word in Spanish. You can be a second and third
generation Puerto Rican of mixed marriage, be highly acculturated
to American culture, but when asked, you say proudly, "I am a
Puerto Rican. " You can meet some of us whose world is bicultural,
a world where English and Spanish are easily interchanged, where
traditional Thanksgiving turkey is followed by lechon asado at
Christmas as the main treat, where salsa or bolero are enjoyed with
the same passion as rock'n roll or the big band sound. It is a
world where various cultures have merged and the historical forces
of slavery and Spanish and American colonialism have left their
indelible marks on the psyche."
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