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Overview
Her story is similar to those of the thousands of illegal immigrants who cross the border into America every day in search of political or economic refuge. In 1988, a woman in her late thirties named Yamileth obtains a passport, leaves her home, and makes a daring, dangerous trip from war-torn Nicaragua through Central America to the United States to join her family. In Los Angeles, Yamileth must find a place to live and a job to support her family, yet keep secret the fact that she entered the country as an illegal alien. She must adapt to new customs and the flood of Latino and Asian immigrants. She must live among the people of California, who in 1994 approved Proposition 187 with the intent to deny undocumented immigrants education, social services, and health care. Yamileth's daily experiences mirror the hopes and frustrations of women and men who must confront new cultural, economic, and political environments. Author Dianne Walta Hart's long and close relationship with Yamileth allows her to present Yamileth's cultural struggles and personal development in poignant narrative and passages in Yamileth's own words. From start to finish, Undocumented in L.A.: An Immigrant's Story is testimonial literature at its best. This eye-opening work will show the reader the opposition and difficulties undocumented immigrants face in a nation that at first beckons them with freedom, then rejects them with unwelcoming borders and restrictive laws. Undocumented in L.A.: An Immigrant's Story is an excellent resource for courses in immigration, political science, and social and cultural studies.
Synopsis
Yamileth's own words.
From start to finish, Undocumented in L.A.: An Immigrant's Story is testimonial literature at its best. This eye-opening work will show the reader the opposition and difficulties undocumented immigrants face in a nation that at first beckons them with freedom, then rejects them with unwelcoming borders and restrictive laws.
Undocumented in L.A.: An Immigrant's Story is an excellent resource for courses in immigration, political science, and social and cultural studies.
Library Journal
This oral history is a sequel to Hart's (Spanish, Oregon State Univ.) Thanks to God and Revolution: The Oral History of a Nicaraguan Family (Univ. of Wisconsin, 1990), which chronicled the life of Yamileth Lopez and her family as they struggled on behalf of the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. Hart met the Lopez family during a 1983 visit to Nicaragua and began recording their oral history the following year. The present work, as the title implies, recounts Yamileth's experiences as an undocumented sojourner in both southern California and Oregon. Hart traces the immigrant's experience as she and her family enter the United States, seek employment, and eventually return home. Hart interjects her own sharp perceptions regarding the circumstances of illegals in the United States, and there are unique insights into the riots following the Rodney King verdict as well. Well recommended for academic and public libraries.Daniel D. Liestman, Seattle Pacific Univ. Lib.