Hemispheric and Transborder Perspectives: Racialization of Mexicans through Time

Authors

  • Lynn Stephen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5399/uo/konturen.4.0.3066

Abstract

This article embeds a discussion of contemporary transborder communities—communities spread out in multiple locations in the U.S. and Mexico—in the history of U.S.-Mexico relations as seen through the colonial and contemporary mapping of space, place, people, race, and ethnicity both visually through the creation of maps and then metaphorically through U.S. immigration policy in the 19th and 20th centuries. I argue that the concept of “transborder” which can include borders of coloniality, ethnicity, race, nation, and region can help us to illuminate U.S.-Mexico relationships through time and the complexities of the racialization of Mexicans in the U.S.

Author Biography

Lynn Stephen

Lynn Stephen received her doctorate from Brandeis University.  She is currently a Distinguished Professor of Arts and Sciences, Professor of Anthropology, and Director of the Center for Latino/a and Latin American Studies (CLLAS) at the University of Oregon.  She has also recently served as co-coordinator (2009-2011) for University of Oregon initiative “The Americas in a Globalized World: Linking Diversity and Internationalization.”  Her work has centered on the intersection of culture and politics. Born in Chicago, Illinois she has a particular interest in the ways that political identities articulate with ethnicity, gender, class, and nationalism in relation to local, regional, and national histories, cultural politics, and systems of governance in Latin America and the U.S. During the past fifteen years she has also engaged the themes of immigration, human rights, neoliberal political-economies, collaborative ethnography, and social movements in her research. She has conducted research in Mexico, El Salvador, Chile, Brazil, and the U.S.

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Published

2013-01-12

How to Cite

Stephen, L. (2013). Hemispheric and Transborder Perspectives: Racialization of Mexicans through Time. Konturen, 4, 46–88. https://doi.org/10.5399/uo/konturen.4.0.3066