Latinidad
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Latinidad'' is a
Spanish-language Spanish ( or , Castilian) is a Romance languages, Romance language of the Indo-European language family that evolved from colloquial Latin spoken on the Iberian peninsula. Today, it is a world language, global language with more than 500 millio ...
term that refers to the various attributes shared by
Latin American people Latin Americans ( es, Latinoamericanos; pt, Latino-americanos; ) are the citizens of Latin American countries (or people with cultural, ancestral or national origins in Latin America). Latin American countries and their diasporas are multi-ethn ...
and their descendants without reducing those similarities to any single essential trait. It was first adopted within US
Latino studies Latino studies is an academic discipline which studies the experience of people of Latin American ancestry in the United States. Closely related to other ethnic studies disciplines such as African-American studies, Asian American studies, and ...
by the sociologist Felix Padilla in his 1985 study of Mexicans and Puerto Ricans in Chicago, and has since been used by a wide range of scholars as a way to speak of Latino communities and cultural practices outside a strictly Latin American context. As a social construct, ''latinidad'' references "a particular geopolitical experience but it also contains within it the complexities and contradictions of immigration, (post)(neo)colonialism, race, color, legal status, class, nation, language and the politics of location." As a theoretical concept ''latinidad'' is a useful way to discuss amalgamations of Latin American cultures and communities outside of any singular national frame. ''Latinidad'' also names the result of forging a shared cultural identity out of disparate elements in order to wield political and social power through pan-Latino solidarity. Rather than be defined as any singular phenomenon, understandings of ''Latinidad'' are contingent on place-specific social relations.Price, Patricia L. "Cohering Culture on Calle Ocho: The Pause and Flow of Latinidad." Globalizations 4.1 (2007): 81–99.


''Latinidad'' and culture

''Latinidad'' invokes pan-Latino solidarity among Latinos in ways that illuminate an understanding of identity, place, and belonging. 'We're all one heart here. There are no distinctions of race, of country, or culture'. This so-called Latinization of the U.S. has the potential to profoundly reshape the parameters of democracy, citizenship, and national identity. Culture involves a dynamic interplay between flow and pause. In this sense, flows and pauses, and the dynamic tension between these two polarities, can be seen to be at the heart of ''latinidad'' as a form of cultural coherence. Manifestations of ''latinidad'' are evidenced at numerous scales, from the very local scale of the individual and his or her immediate zone of inhabitance—a block, a neighborhood, a street—to nations and world regions that are hemispheric in scale. It is place-specific: both shaped, and is shaped by, the context in which it emerges. ''Latinidad'' has important ramifications for national, transnational, hemispheric, and even global, modalities of belonging. According to Price (2007) this flexible coalescence of identity around a variously imagined Latinidad provides fertile conceptual and empirical terrain for understanding how culture coalesces at the scale of quotidian human encounters.


''Latinidad'' and Latino Studies

Numerous scholars have taken up the term ''latinidad'' as a way to address the cultural practices of pan-Latino communities. It has been particularly central to discussions of popular culture, media, the arts and activism. Arlene Dávila suggests that the aggregation of Latino populations that ''latinidad'' names functions to serve the economic needs of transnational markets, stressing the ways that Latino communities are whitened in the process. David Román and Alberto Sandoval use the term to examine and critique the "organic understanding and appreciation of all things Latino". In the book, ''Queer Latinidad: Identity Practices, Discursive Spaces,'' Juana María Rodríguez uses the term to explore how diverse LGBT Latino identities are imagined, performed, or practiced within different venues including community activism, law, and digital cultures. Latino studies scholar,
Deborah Paredez Deborah Paredez (born December 19, 1970) is an American poet, scholar, and cultural critic. She is the author of the poetry collections, ''Year of the Dog'' and ''This Side of Skin,'' and the critical study, '' Selenidad: Selena, Latinos, and the ...
, combines the term ''latinidad'' with the subject of her book on tejana singer songwriter
Selena Selena Quintanilla Pérez (; April 16, 1971 – March 31, 1995), known mononymously as Selena, was an American Tejano singer. Called the " Queen of Tejano music", her contributions to music and fashion made her one of the most celebrated Mex ...
, in her book ''Selenidad: Selena, Latinos, and the Performance of Memory''. And in ''Performing Queer Latinidad: Dance, Sexuality, Politics'', Ramon H. Rivera-Servera deploys the term to speak about the communities engendered through dance and other forms of cultural performance Rutgers University Press has a book series entitled: Latinidad: Transnational Cultures in the United States A study by María Elena Cepeda finds
Shakira Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll ( , ; born 2 February 1977), professionally known by the mononym Shakira, is a Colombian singer and songwriter. Born and raised in Barranquilla, she has been referred to as the " Queen of Latin Music" and is ...
as the "Idealized Transnational Citizen" and describes her as a symbol of "Colombianidad" and Latinidad.


''Latinidad'' in literature

In 2003 Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez published her first novel, ''The Dirty Girls Social Club'', where she explores the underlying tensions, conflicts, and contradictions inherent in the social construction of ''latinidad''.Morrison, Amanda Maria. "Chicanas and “Chick Lit”: Contested Latinidad in the Novels of Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez." ''Journal of Popular Culture'' 43.2 (2010): 309–329. In both of her novels, ''The Dirty Girls Social Club'' (2003) and ''Playing with Boys'', Valdes-Rodriguez keys in on both race and social class and the ways in which the two are inextricably linked.


See also

* AfroLatinidad *
La Raza The Spanish expression ('the people' or 'the community'; literal translation: 'the race') has historically been used to refer to the Hispanophone populations (primarily though not always exclusively in the Western Hemisphere), considered as ...


References

Latin American studies