种族化美国人的真实性:墨西哥裔美国人对外国他者的看法

A. J. Silva, A. L. Murga
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期以来,美国的反墨西哥情绪一直困扰着墨西哥裔美国人的生活。自从墨西哥裔美国人加入联邦以来,他们经历了作为二等公民的种族化过程,而持续的反移民气候继续影响着他们。这影响了他们对白人种族框架的使用,导致他们将自己与被认为是外国人的人拉开距离。通过对美墨边境地区自认为是墨西哥裔美国人的15次深度采访,我们发现,两国之间的分歧已经深深植根于边境地区居民的生活经历中。我们的受访者提出的主题说明了墨西哥裔美国人如何使用非法,属于一个国家和危险的他者的概念来区分自己与外国出生的墨西哥人以及他们处理移民问题的方式。我们认为,生活在跨国边界空间的墨西哥裔美国人在他们的日常生活中作为种族化的存在,导致他们寻求将自己与外国他者分开的方法。我们认为,理解墨西哥裔美国人如何使用白人种族框架的更大意义是重要的,因为他们根深蒂固的思想和信仰是建立在种族主义本土主义差异之上的,这些差异被用来制定和支持针对种族化其他人的政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Racializing American Authenticity: Mexican Americans’ Perceptions of the Foreign Other
Anti-Mexican sentiment in the United States has long plagued the lives of people of Mexican descent. Since their incorporation, Mexican Americans have experienced processes of racialization as second-class citizens while a continuous anti-immigrant climate continues to impact them. This has influenced their use of a white racial frame resulting in their distancing of themselves from perceived foreign-ness. Drawing on 15 in-depth interviews with self-identified Mexican Americans along the U.S.-Mexico border, we find that divisions between the two nations have become embedded in the lived experiences of those residing in the borderland region. The themes raised by our respondents illustrate how Mexican Americans use notions of illegality, belonging to a nation, and the dangerous other to differentiate themselves from foreign-born Mexicans and the ways they address immigration. We argue that Mexican Americans living in a transnational border space navigate their everyday lives as racialized beings, resulting in their search for ways to situate themselves apart from the foreign other. We argue that the larger implications for understanding how Mexican Americans use the white racial frame is significant since their embedded ideas and beliefs are founded upon racist nativist differences that are used to create and support policies that target racialized others.
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