El Malcriado, Volume 1, Number 39, "Carrillo Puerto, Symbol of the Southeastern Revolution"

Title

El Malcriado, Volume 1, Number 39, "Carrillo Puerto, Symbol of the Southeastern Revolution"

Subject

United Farm Workers, El Malcriado, Tierra Y Libertad

Description

El Malcriado, “The Voice of the Farmworker," was a newspaper for the farmworker community in California’s Central Valley, an essential medium to communicate activities, concerns, and union updates for the United Farm Workers. It was provided to the union members free of charge, but also offered subscriptions and could be bought at local stores throughout the Central Valley in California. This print utilized on the 39th issue of El Malcriado, although does not depict Zapata himself, utilizes the common expression popularized by Zapata in the Mexican Revolution, "Tierra y Libertad," or Land and Liberty. Again, the TGP artwork helps express the UFW's own desires for land and liberty as farmworkers who work the land in the U.S.

Creator

Fernando Castro Pacheco

Source

El Taller de Gráfica Popular print in El Malcriado, UFW newspaper

Publisher

El Taller Gráfico, Farmworker Press, Delano, California

Date

June 30, 1966, (date of artwork unknown)

Contributor

[no text]

Rights

Courtesy of the Chicano Studies Research Center at UCLA

Relation

[no text]

Format

[no text]

Language

[no text]

Type

[no text]

Identifier

[no text]

Coverage

[no text]

Files

El Malcriado_TyL_LowRes.jpg

Citation

Fernando Castro Pacheco, “El Malcriado, Volume 1, Number 39, "Carrillo Puerto, Symbol of the Southeastern Revolution",” Chican@s (re)Imagining Zapata, accessed April 29, 2024, https://postersofrevolution.omeka.net/items/show/9.