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Citizens but Not Americans: Race and Belonging among Latino Millennials - Latina/o Sociology by Nilda Flores-Gonzalez Details

Exploring how the breed is formed The ideas of the Latin generations of national generations from the Latin alphabet form the second largest segment of the millennial population. In large…

Citizens but Not Americans synopsis

Exploring how the breed is formed The ideas of the Latin generations of national generations from the Latin alphabet form the second largest segment of the millennial population. In large numbers will inevitably have a significant social, economic and political impact on American society.

However, given the basic demographics, little is known about how they understand themselves as Americans. In the citizens, not the Americans, Nilda Flores-Gonzales examines how the Latin American generation recognizes race, race, and develops ideas of belonging. Based on nearly 100 interviews, Flores-Gonzales argues that although these Latino / Us young people are US citizens by birth, they do not feel they are part of the "American project" and are forever at the margins you are looking for. An internal look at how properties such as descent, skin color, social class, gender, language and culture converge and form the feelings of these young people of belonging as they move in daily racism.

The voices of the Latin American generation reveal their understanding of racial discrimination along three dimensions - ethnic, ethnic and American. These young people take advantage of other well-known competitors who deny their own reality by building the concepts of belonging that allow them to identify themselves as true members of the American national community.

Challenging the current thinking about race and national belonging, citizens and not Americans contribute significantly to our understanding of the Latin millennial generation and make us a strong debate about the nature of race and belonging in the United States.



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