Indigenous Immigrant Youth’s Understandings of Power: Race, Labor, and Language

David W. Barillas Chón
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

One highly significant yet under-investigated source of variation within the Latinx Education scholarship are Indigenous immigrants from Latin America. This study investigates how Maya and other Indigenous recent immigrant youth from Guatemala and Mexico, respectively, understand indigeneity. Using a Critical Latinx Indigeneities analytic, along with literature on the coloniality of power and settler-colonialism, I base my findings on a year-long qualitative study of eight self-identifying indigenous youth from Guatemala and Mexico and highlight two emergent themes: youth’s understanding of (a) asymmetries of power based on division of labor, and (b) language hierarchies. I propose that race is a key component that contributes to the reproduction of divisions of labor and the subaltern positioning of Indigenous languages. Findings from this study provide linguistic, economic, and historical contexts of Maya and other Indigenous immigrants’ lived experiences to educators and other stakeholders in public schools working with immigrant Latinx populations.
土著移民青年对权力的理解:种族、劳动和语言
在拉丁美洲教育奖学金中,一个非常重要但尚未得到充分研究的变异来源是来自拉丁美洲的土著移民。本研究分别调查了玛雅人和来自危地马拉和墨西哥的其他土著新移民青年是如何理解土著的。我使用批判性拉丁土著分析,以及关于权力殖民性和定居者殖民主义的文献,基于对来自危地马拉和墨西哥的8名自我认同的土著青年长达一年的定性研究,并强调了两个新兴主题:青年对(a)基于劳动分工的权力不对称的理解,以及(b)语言等级。我认为种族是促成劳动分工再生产和土著语言次等地位的关键因素。本研究的发现为教育工作者和与拉丁裔移民一起工作的公立学校的其他利益相关者提供了玛雅人和其他土著移民生活经历的语言、经济和历史背景。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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