Latino Crossings: Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and the Politics of Race and Citizenship
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| Latino Crossings: Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and the Politics of Race and Citizenship | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Despite being lumped together by census data, there are deep divisions between Mexicans and Puerto Ricans living in the United States. Mexicans see Puerto Ricans as deceptive, disagreeable, nervous, rude, violent, and dangerous, while Puerto Ricans see Mexicans as submissive, gullible, naive, and folksy. The distinctly different styles of Spanish each group speaks reinforces racialized class differences. Despite these antagonistic divisions, these two groups do show some form of Latinidad, or a shared sense of Latin American identity. Latino Crossings examines how these constructions of Latino self and otherness interact with America's dominant white/black racial consciousness. Latino Crossings is a striking piece of scholarship that transcends the usually rigid boundary between Chicano/Mexican and Puerto Rican studies.
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| 11-10-06 | 4 | 1\1 |
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Latino Crossings is an eye-opening study at a propitious time. The book helps dismantle generalizations about the "latino" population in the US, while also bringing the question of citizenship into a new light at a time of heated public debate on the immigration issue. The authors, in an ethnographic study in Chicago, look at issues of "legality" and social tensions between the Mexican and Puerto Rican populations there. For those already versed in such dynamics, the theoretical approach through the racialization lens offers new ways of deconstructing the institutional racism in the United States. Finally, for beginners like me, the introduction juxtaposes the migration of Mexican and Puerto Ricans into US society in an interesting way.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-16 16:29:39 EST)
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