This book highlights cutting-edge articles published in the journal, Latino Studies, over the last two decades. It features the work of leading and emerging scholars whose innovative theoretical and conceptual contributions to Latinx studies have shaped scholarly debates in our interdisciplinary field and continue to have an impact. This collection embraces a broad range of topics organized in four sections representative of major themes in Latinx studies including: Latinidades/Identidades, Race/Racialization, Migration/Immigration, and Legality/Citizenship/Belonging.  Latino Studies: A 20th Year Anniversary Reader will be an indispensable resource for students and scholars looking for a robust interdisciplinary introduction to Latinx studies, the pivotal issues and debates that have shaped the field over the recent past, and directions for future research.


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Latino Studies: A 20th Year Anniversary Reader will be an indispensable resource for students and scholars looking for a robust interdisciplinary introduction to Latinx studies, the pivotal issues and debates that have shaped the field over the recent past, and directions for future research.

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1. Introduction - Lourdes Torres and Marisa Alicea.- 2. Jennifer as Selena: Rethinking Latinidad in Media and Popular Culture - Frances R. Aparicio.- 3. The Central American Transnational Imaginary: Defining the Transnational and Gendered Contours of Central American Immigrant Experience - Yajaira M. Padilla.- 4. Dora the Explorer, Constructing “Latinidades” and the Politics of Global Citizenship - Nicole M. Guidotti-Hernández.- 5. Making Masculinity: Negotiations of Gender Presentation Among Latino Gay Men - Anthony Ocampo.- 6. “Wild Tongues Can’t be Tamed”: Rumor, Racialized Sexuality, and the 1917 Bath Riots in the US-Mexico Borderlands - Tala Khanmalek.- 7. Inventing the Race: Latinos and the Ethnoracial Pentagon - Silvio Torres-Saillant.- 8. Latinos as the “Living Dead”: Raciality, Expendability, and Border Militarization - John D. Márquez.- 9. TWB (Talking while Bilingual): Linguistic Profiling ofLatina/os, and other Linguistic torquemadas - Ana Celia Zentella.- 10. Critical Latinx Indigeneities: A Paradigm Drift  - María Josefina Saldaña-Portillo.- 11. “Better than White Trash”: Work Ethic, Latinidad and Whiteness in Rural Arkansas - Miranda Cady Hallett.- 12. “I Can’t Go to College Because I Don’t Have Papers”: Incorporation Patterns of Latino Undocumented Youth - Leisy J. Abrego.- 13. The Invisibility of Farmworkers: Implications and Remedies - Ken Saldanha.- 14. Latino Immigrant Men and the Deportation Crisis: A Gendered Racial Removal Program -Tanya Golash-Boza and Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo.- 15. Pursuant to Deportation: Latinos and Immigrant Detention - David Hernández.- 16. Dispatches from the “Viejo” New South: Historicizing Recent Latino Migrations - Julie M. Weise.- 17. The Legal Production of Mexican/Migrant “Illegality” - Nicholas De Genova.- 18. Central American Immigrant Workers and Legal Violence in Phoenix, Arizona - Cecilia Menjíva.- 19. Delinquent Citizenship, National Performances: Racialization, Surveillance, and the Politics of “Worthiness” in Puerto Rican Chicago - Ana Y. Ramos-Zayas.- 20. Beyond Resistance in Dominican American Women’s Fiction: Healing and Growth through the Spectrum of Quietude in Angie Cruz’s Soledad and Naima Coster’s Halsey Street.- Regina Marie Mills.- 21. Disposable Subjects: The Racial Normativity of Neoliberalism and Latino Immigrants - Raymond Rocco














 

 

 


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This book highlights cutting-edge articles published in the journal, Latino Studies, over the last two decades. It features the work of leading and emerging scholars whose innovative theoretical and conceptual contributions to Latinx studies have shaped scholarly debates in our interdisciplinary field and continue to have an impact. This collection embraces a broad range of topics organized in four sections representative of major themes in Latinx studies including: Latinidades/Identidades, Race/Racialization, Migration/Immigration, and Legality/Citizenship/Belonging.  Latino Studies: A 20th Year Anniversary Reader will be an indispensable resource for students and scholars looking for a robust interdisciplinary introduction to Latinx studies, the pivotal issues and debates that have shaped the field over the recent past, and directions for future research.

 

Lourdes Torres is Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies at DePaul University.  She is editor of Latino Studies and author of Puerto Rican Discourse: A Sociolinguistic Study of a New York Suburb.  Her co-authored book Spanish in Chicago is forthcoming.

 

Marisa Alicea is Professor of Sociology and an affiliate faculty member of the Latin American and Latino Studies Department at DePaul University. She is co-author of Surviving Heroin: Interviews with Women in Methadone Clinics and co-editor of Migration and Immigration: A Global View. Marisa currently serves an associate editor of Latino Studies.

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"​For more than two decades, Latino Studies has created an invaluable space for cutting-edge research in Latinx Studies whose impact extends far beyond this interdisciplinary field. The articles in this anthology reflect the exciting, innovative, and path-breaking contributions of Latinx scholars. Yet it also is a testament to the extraordinary dedication, commitment and labor of scholars whose work editing, recruiting solicitations, and supporting scholars' submissions has played an indispensable role in providing a respected venue for rigorous scholarship. The articles chosen for this anthology both reflect key debates and topics in the field and are an excellent introduction to students at all levels of the diverse and exciting fields of Latinx Studies." (Gina Pérez, Professor of Comparative American Studies, Oberlin, USA) "For the past two decades, the Latino Studies journal has published some of the cutting-edge research on migration, transnationalism, genderand sexuality, race, citizenship, and other critical issues relating to people of Hispanic American origin in the United States. This thought-provoking collection, expertly edited by Lourdes Torres and Marisa Alicea, will make it easier for scholars, students, and the general public to access the insights of a substantial body of academic knowledge that helps to understand the complex experiences and challenges of Latinos and Latinas, as well as the more contested term Latinx." (Jorge Duany, Professor of Anthropology, Florida International University, USA)
"Latino Studies: A 20th Anniversary Reader includes some of the most influential and important scholarship on Latino Studies over the past 20 years—from the field’s nascence to its prominence today.  In a fitting reflection of the Latino Studies journal’s dedicated commitment to interdisciplinarity, the book features prominent scholars from fields in the Humanities and Social Sciences—but always with aneye to how the work crosses disciplinary lines and breaks down silos. In short, this is a phenomenal showcase of Latino Studies in the 21st century." (Marta Caminero-Santangelo, University Distinguished Professor, University of Kansas, USA)

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Collection of essays celebrating 20 years of Latino Studies journal Curated by Dr Lourdes Torres and Dr Marisa Alicea Includes essays that have significantly impacted the Latino studies field
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9783031377839
Publisert
2024-02-02
Utgiver
Springer International Publishing AG
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Biografisk notat

Lourdes Torres is Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies at DePaul University.  She is editor of Latino Studies and author of Puerto Rican Discourse: A Sociolinguistic Study of a New York Suburb.  Her co-authored book Spanish in Chicago is forthcoming.

 

Marisa Alicea is Professor of Sociology and an affiliate faculty member of the Latin American and Latino Studies Department at DePaul University. She is co-author of Surviving Heroin: Interviews with Women in Methadone Clinics and co-editor of Migration and Immigration: A Global View. Marisa currently serves an associate editor of Latino Studies.