Reviews
"This is an important book, and educational, civil rights, and Texas historians will find much within to appreciate and discuss."—Southwestern Historical Quarterly
"Racial Uncertainties explains how racial and ethnic identities are both time and space specific but also how the law works to cement our understanding of identity and eliminate the possibility for fluidity."—The Society for US Intellectual History
“Scholars interested in race, class, education, social movements, and western history will find Racial Uncertainties useful for understanding the history of Mexican American racial identity in Denver and the impact of colorblind constitutionalism in the years following the civil rights movement.”—Journal of Arizona History
"Finally, a book that unlocks
Keyes! As Danielle Olden demonstrates, this pivotal 1973 case is best understood as the Supreme Court's first 'western' desegregation decision, owing to the beyond black-and-white complexities that Mexican Americans introduced into the conceptualization of desegregation and how to implement it.
Racial Uncertainties joins a growing body of scholarship that widens the lens for thinking about civil rights history—demographically, geographically, and, as a result, analytically."—Mark Brilliant, author of
The Color of America Has Changed: How Racial Diversity Shaped Civil Rights Reform in California, 1941–1978
"Racial Uncertainties is an innovative, well-researched, and well-written book that pushes the boundaries of the field. Olden takes the story of segregation out of the South and examines it in the context of the regional racial lexicon of the multiethnic, multiracial West. Her analysis shows how Brown v. Board of Education has ramifications far beyond the African American population and demonstrates the multiple complex strategies different groups used to challenge school segregation."—Natalia Molina, author of A Place at the Nayarit: How a Mexican Restaurant Nourished a Community
"Are Latinos white or nonwhite? This question has riddled historians and other scholars for a long time. In Racial Uncertainties, Olden argues that the answer depended on the articulation and relationality of Spanish, Indigenous, and Black Identities, with real-world consequences in the arenas of schooling, housing, and law. Her book on Denver—a relatively unexplored urban landscape that is also representative of other southwestern cities—is a critical contribution to our understanding of the Latino past, present, and future."—Geraldo Cadava, author of The Hispanic Republican: The Shaping of an American Political Identity, from Nixon to Trump
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