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parsed(2022-06-21) - pubdate: 2022-06-21
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pub date: 1655787600
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From Threatening Guerrillas to Forever Illegals

US Central Americans and the Cultural Politics of Non-Belonging

June 21, 2022 | Trade paperback
ISBN: 9781477325278
$36.95
Reader Reward Price: $33.26 info
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Description

The experience of Central Americans in the United States is marked by a vicious contradiction. In entertainment and information media, Salvadorans, Guatemalans, Nicaraguans, and Hondurans are hypervisible as threatening guerrillas, MS-13 gangsters, maids, and "forever illegals." Central Americans are unseen within the broader conception of Latinx community, foreclosing avenues to recognition.

Yajaira M. Padilla explores how this regime of visibility and invisibility emerged over the past forty years--bookended by the right-wing presidencies of Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump--and how Central American immigrants and subsequent generations have contested their rhetorical disfiguration. Drawing from popular films and TV, news reporting, and social media, Padilla shows how Central Americans in the United States have been constituted as belonging nowhere, imagined as permanent refugees outside the boundaries of even minority representation. Yet in documentaries about cross-border transit through Mexico, street murals, and other media, US Central Americans have counteracted their exclusion in ways that defy dominant paradigms of citizenship and integration.

About this Author

Yajaira M. Padilla is an associate professor in the departments of English and Latin American and Latino studies at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. She is the author of Changing Women, Changing Nation.

ISBN: 9781477325278
Format: Trade paperback
Series: Latinx: The Future Is Now
Pages: 249
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Published: 2022-06-21

Reviews

A well-researched, poignant discussion of the representations, misrepresentations, and erasures of the expanding Central American and Latinx communities in the US. [Padilla's] work seamlessly illustrates the significance and consequences of these representations, or lack thereof...Recommended.

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