“These Latin Girls Mean Business”1: Expanding the Boundaries of Latina Youth Identity in Meg Medina’s YA Novel Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass

C. Herrera
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Abstract

This chapter examines the ways in which Latina urban identities have been shaped by popular culture as the “chola/homegirl.” However, this chapter argues that Medina’s novel challenges the seemingly natural alignment of urban Latina identity with the chola by calling for a more expansive view of what it means to be a young, urban Latina. This chapter uses Chicana/Latina feminist theorizing that has examined the chola identity, in addition to sociological research that has studied the ways in which urban girls of color are constructed as “bad” or “delinquent.” This chapter examines the protagonist in light of these theories. Further, the chapter argues that Medina’s novel, in expanding what it means to be a young, urban Latina, questions the ways in which those Latinas who do not model themselves as cholas are victims of identity-policing, rendered not “really” Latina, and dismissed as weirdos or outsiders within this narrow gender/racial identity script that defines chola identity as the only “authentic” young, urban, Latina identity.
“这些拉丁女孩意味着生意”1:在梅格·梅迪纳的青少年小说中扩展拉丁裔青年身份的界限
本章考察了拉丁裔城市身份被流行文化塑造为“chola/ homgirl”的方式。然而,本章认为,麦地那的小说挑战了城市拉丁裔身份与拉丁裔的看似自然的一致性,呼吁对年轻的城市拉丁裔意味着什么有更广泛的看法。这一章使用了美籍/拉丁裔女性主义理论,这些理论研究了黑人身份,此外还有社会学研究,研究了城市有色人种女孩被构建为“坏”或“犯罪”的方式。本章根据这些理论来考察主人公。此外,本章还认为,麦地那的小说在扩展年轻的城市拉丁裔的意义时,质疑了那些不以拉美裔为榜样的拉美裔是身份监管的受害者,被认为不是“真正的”拉美裔,在这种将拉美裔身份定义为唯一“真实的”年轻、城市拉丁裔身份的狭隘性别/种族身份脚本中,被视为怪人或局外人。
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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