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Hispanic Culture and Literature in the U.S. SPN400
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Objectives To develop cultural competence on the various Latino/a populations How Latin@ identity is constructed through: History Politics Arts Media To see interconnections between Latina American and Latin@ issues To gain a deeper understanding of ourselves
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Objectives Examine, through poetry, fiction, film, and essays, issues such as: Race Ethnicity Language Gender Politics Identity
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What comes to mind when you hear the terms “Latino/a” or “Hispanic”? What experiences have you had with the Latino or Hispanic community? What would you like to gain from this course?
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Homework for Thursday 26th (1) Study data by PEW Research Center: Hispanic origin and nativity: http://www.pewhispanic.org/2013/06/19/infographic- hispanic-origin-and-nativity/http://www.pewhispanic.org/2013/06/19/infographic- hispanic-origin-and-nativity/ b. Hispanics and their views of identity: http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/05/30/hispanics-and-their-views-of-identity/http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/05/30/hispanics-and-their-views-of-identity/ c. Latinos by geography: http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/03/16/latinos-by-geography/http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/03/16/latinos-by-geography/ d. Latino youths optimistic but beset by problems: http://www.pewhispanic.org/2009/12/11/latino-youths-optimistic-but-beset-by- problems/http://www.pewhispanic.org/2009/12/11/latino-youths-optimistic-but-beset-by- problems/ (2) Write a one page paragraph summary highlighting the main points of the PEW data
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What’s in a name? HISPANIC OR LATINO/A?
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Latin American (latinoamericano / latinoamericana) Descendants from Spain + Amerindians + Africans 19 Latin American countries and 1 commonwealth (Puerto Rico) www.borgenmagazine.com
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Latin America Strong national identities: Cuba = cubanos Mexico = mexicanos Puerto Rico = puertorriqueños
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Hispanic: Where does this term come from? Derived from España / Hispania; Conquest of the “New World” Hispanics = Census Bureau also includes Spanish Americans (Spain) and Brazilian- Americans (Brazil) as Hispanics. U.S. citizens and residents who originated from Latin America
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Hispanicity (U.S. Government) According to the U.S. Government (1976), Hispanics are : “Americans of Spanish origin or descent...who identify themselves as being of Spanish-speaking background and trace their origin or descent from Mexico, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Central and South America and other Spanish- speaking countries.”
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Hispanicity (Pew Research Center) Two approaches: (1) Hispanic or Latino: a member of an ethnic group that tracks his/her origin to 20 Spanish- speaking, Latin American nations and Spain (not Portugal or Brazil). (2) Anyone who says they are. http://www.pewhispanic.org/2009/05/28/whos-hispanic/
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Hispanic U.S. bureaucratic government census term diverse ethnic group in the U.S. united by the Spanish language (for the sake of simplicity) solidarity
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Latino or Latina (Latino/a or Latin@) pan-ethnic consciousness It includes Hispanics You can be Latino, but not necessarily Hispanic (Brazilian-Americans)
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Hispanic vs Latino/a Debate “Hispanic is English for a person of Latino origin who wants to be accepted by the white status quo” —Sandra Cisneros, New York Times “Latino” might refer to an even older empire (Roman) What about all those countries of Latin descent? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRbCvyxMeNI
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Based on the Pew Research Center data: How does this community prefer to describe themselves? Do they prefer to be called Latino or Hispanic? Does this community feel that they share a common culture? http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/05/30/hispanics-and-their- views-of-identity/
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Hispanic/Latin@ vs Latin American How do they prefer to identify themselves? It depends on the social environment and interactions Hispanic/Latin@Argentinean (pan-ethnic) (national origin) It is important to know how society sees them
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Some facts about Latin@s: largest minority in the U.S. (54 million) large immigration (17.5% of pop.) tendency to have large families (2.5 children per family vs 1.8) Triple in size by 2050 Who are the largest subgroup of Latinos? Mexicans, followed by Puerto Ricans and Cubans Fastest growth comes from Central and South America
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Origins and Current Residency Where do Latinos mainly live in the U.S.? California, Texas, Florida, Illinois, Arizona, New York and New Jersey Nowadays: Other states, including North Carolina http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/03/16/latinos-by-geography/
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South Carolina http://www.pewhispanic.org/states/state/sc/ http://www.pewhispanic.org/states/state/sc/
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Demystifying Information Most Latinos/as are U.S. citizens Small minority are legal resident aliens (green cards) Unknown are undocumented: nearly half of this population originates from Mexico workers who slip across the Mexico-U.S. border to earn a measly amount in fields and factories they send the money back home to keep their families afloat
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Do most Latinos believe they share a common culture? How do Latinos classify themselves racially? How do Latinos classify themselves ethnically? http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/05/30/hispanics-and- their-views-of-identity/ http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/05/30/hispanics-and- their-views-of-identity/ Questions: According to the PEW…
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Do Latinos think of themselves as typical Americans? Do Latinos think that they should learn and speak English in order to succeed in the U.S.?
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Census Bureau: Problematic In 2000: In 2010: Mexican Mexican Puerto Rican Puerto Rican Cuban Cuban Hispanic (other) Another Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin + write-in answer to provide with specific origin
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Race, Ethnicity and Ethnorace Read article by Linda Martin Alcoff: “Latinos and the Categories of Race” http://www.alcoff.com/content/chap10latra ce.html http://www.alcoff.com/content/chap10latra ce.html Write down responses for the following questions related to Alcoff’s article
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Key Concepts: Diaspora: dispersion of a group of people from their original home Race: mode of identification based on physical visible markers (really?) Ethnicity: shared cultural practices, customs, history, religion, and language
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Key Concepts: Cultural Homogeneity: a culture without diversity Cultural Heterogeneity: a culture with diversity Hegemony: dominance of one state/country/group over another (it can be cultural, political or economical) to convince society to believe in a current power structure
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Key Concepts: Discourse: a speech/essay about a topic that requires thoughts and ideas structured in an orderly fashion Global North vs Global South: a socio-economic-political divide between the North (North America/Western Europe/East Asia) the South (Africa, Latin America, parts of Asia/Middle East)
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Introduction Understanding that Latinos are a diverse group, could “Latino” be a meaningful identity term to use? In what sense? What are the three questions that Alcoff is trying to address in this article?
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Part I. Three options Does the author believe that Latinos fit into the North American racialized identities (White/Black/Native American)? Why or why not? How do Latin Americans immigrating to the U.S. resolve the race identification issue?
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Part IV. Latin American Identities Do Latin Americans have a consistent theory of ethnic or racial identity? Whether yes or no, how so? Name an example. According to Alcoff, how is the term “Hispanic” interpreted in different parts of the United States?
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Part VII: Ethnorace What is ethnorace? Why does Alcoff think this might solve the issue with Latin@ identification? What can we learn from the “Black Identity” or “Blackness” approach for identifying a group of individuals? According to Alcoff, could we use the “Blackness” approach to help construct an identity for Latin@s? Why or Why not?
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