Blacks may be second class, but they can't make them leave: Mexican racial formation and immigrant status in Winston-Salem

JA Jones - Latino Studies, 2012 - Springer
Latino Studies, 2012Springer
In this article, I investigate how race is produced by looking at the reception experiences of
Afro and Mestizo Mexican migrants to the new South. Despite the fact that Afro and Mestizo
Mexicans are both phenotypically and culturally distinct from one another, they assert a
shared racial identity as minorities and as Latinos. On the basis of ethnographic field work in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, I argue that their perceived similarities with African
Americans and pervasive discrimination owing to status drives Afro-Mexicans to assert a …
Abstract
In this article, I investigate how race is produced by looking at the reception experiences of Afro and Mestizo Mexican migrants to the new South. Despite the fact that Afro and Mestizo Mexicans are both phenotypically and culturally distinct from one another, they assert a shared racial identity as minorities and as Latinos. On the basis of ethnographic field work in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, I argue that their perceived similarities with African Americans and pervasive discrimination owing to status drives Afro-Mexicans to assert a race-based Latino identity that is shaped by their understanding of African American experiences.
Springer