Submitted by Ellen Palms
on
Alina R. Méndez’s latest publication, “Gendered Invisibility: Ethnic Mexican Women and the Bracero Program” is now available online. With twenty-five primary sources and an introduction and bibliography, “Gendered Invisibility” is a great instructional resource for high school and college classrooms focused on ethnic studies, history, and gender, women, and sexuality studies. The Organization of American Historians recently published a short feature article on Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1600-2000 (WASM), the online journal and database where this collection is published. In it, WASM co-editor Rebecca Jo Plant discusses Méndez’s project and its important contributions.