Credits

This digital project is a product of decades of collaboration in its two forms (print bibliography and digital map) at Recovering the US Hispanic Literary Heritage (Recovery). This information is based on the work of countless scholars, librarians, archivists, research assistants, volunteers, interns, and the Recovery Board throughout the years.

Bibliography Editors

The data used to create this map was originally published in the following resource:

Kanellos, Nicolás and Helvetia Martell. Hispanic Periodicals in the United States, Origins to 1960: A Brief History and Comprehensive Bibliography. Arte Público Press, 2000.

USLDH Team

Digital Map Team (Research Assistants and Volunteers)

Citation

How to Cite this Project

To cite the digital project, we suggest the following citation:

Visual Bibliography of Hispanic Periodicals in the United States. Recovering the US Hispanic Literary Heritage. https://recoveryapp.github.io/index.html. Accessed [DATE].

How to Cite Content on Protocols Page

Citations from the Protocols page should identify the author as specified on the page:

Martell, Helvetia. "About the Bibliography." Hispanic Periodicals in the United States: Origins to 1960 A Brief History and Comprehensive Bibliography. Eds. Nicolas Kanellos and Helvetia Martell, Arte Público Press, 2000, pp. 137-8.

About

Recovering the US Hispanic Literary Heritage

To purchase Hispanic Periodicals in the United States, Origins to 1960: A Brief History and Comprehensive Bibliography, please visit the Arte Público Press website or your favorite book seller's website.

Recovering the US Hispanic Literary Heritage (“Recovery”) is an international program to locate, preserve and disseminate Hispanic culture of the United States in its written form since colonial times until 1980. The program has compiled a comprehensive bibliography of books, pamphlets, manuscripts and ephemera produced by Latinos. The holdings available at the project include thousands of original books, manuscripts, archival items and ephemera, a microfilm collection of approximately 1,400 historical newspapers, hundreds of thousands of microfilmed and digitized items, a vast collection of photographs, an extensive authority list, and personal papers. In addition, the program has published or reprinted more than 40 historical books, two anthologies, and nine volumes of research articles. The program organizes a biennial international conference and has some five thousand affiliated scholars, librarians and archivists. Recovering the US Hispanic Literary Heritage is the premier center for research on Latino documentary history in the United States.