TY - JOUR AU - Harvey, Paul AB - Book Reviews 1441 title offers a particularly new slant on the sub­ the residential patterns and in entertainment ject, each proves a valuable addition to the field and businesses, schooling continues to follow and will be enjoyable reading for historians in­ the blueprint laid out in the 1920s. Moreover, terested in the American West or natural re­ both sectors of the community, evenly divided source management. between Anglo and Mexican American, still lead separate lives, thus "social apartness," Brian Black Menchaca follows a long tradition in Chi­ Gettysburg College cano studies, emphasizing race as the critical Gettysburg, Pennsylvania factor shaping social relations. The focus, how­ ever, marginalizes the importance that economic TheMexican Outsiders: A Community History interests may have in influencing public policy. ofMarginalization andDiscrimination in Cali­ Like many southern California towns during forma. By Martha Menchaca .. (Austin: Univer­ the teens and twenties, Santa Paula owed its sity of Texas Press, 1995. xx, 250 pp. Cloth, existence to the citrus industry, yet Menchaca $40.00, ISBN 0-292-75173-7. Paper, $17.95, ISBN does not attend to the possible significance of 0-292-75174-5.) that condition. Citrus constituted the backbone of California's agriculture for the first half of The Mexican Outsiders, by Martha Menchaca, TI - Saints in Exile: The Holiness-Pentecostal Experience in African American Religion and Culture. By Cheryl J. Sanders. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996. xiv, 177 pp. $24.95, ISBN 0-19-509843-9.) JO - The Journal of American History DO - 10.2307/2952998 DA - 1997-03-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/oxford-university-press/saints-in-exile-the-holiness-pentecostal-experience-in-african-v7RyAJs35V SP - 1441 EP - 1442 VL - 83 IS - 4 DP - DeepDyve ER -