Uncovering Latina suicides

Posted on Leave a commentPosted in Interviews, investigative journalism, Latinas suicidal behavior, Latinas suicidal behaviors, News

Image from AP What is driving high suicide rates amongst Latina teenagers? Latina teenagers have one of the highest rates of suicide among teens in the United States. In many cases they share a common thread: they are first-generation Americans with immigrant parents – and they find themselves caught between old traditions and their American […]

¿Qué Onda?: Urban Youth Culture and Border Identity

Posted on Posted in Blog, Identity, social identity-in-betwenness, transnationalism

¿Qué Onda? Urban Youth Culture and Border Identity By Cynthia L. Bejarano Angel was born in Arizona and is part of the in-crowd. She likes clubbing, dancing, and going to car shows. Betzayra is from Mexico City and, despite polio-related disabilities, is the confident group leader of the Mexican girls. Arturo is also from Mexico […]

Second- and Third-Generation Latinas and the Difficulty to ‘Fit In’ — Everyday Feminism

Posted on Leave a commentPosted in Blog, family dynamics, Identity, Immigration, intersectionality, social identity-ethnicity

Free photo source: https://pixabay.com/en/girl-against-the-wall-girl-portrait-1996988/ There’s no winning, because “no soy de aquí, ni soy de allá.” Luckily, I no longer feel like I have to prove my identity to anyone. Because being Latina is a multidimensional experience. I love my Puerto Rican roots, but I’m also not ashamed that I’ve acculturated into American society. And […]

Culturally sensitive mental health treatments for young Latinas that work

Posted on Leave a commentPosted in Article, family dynamics, Latinas suicidal behavior, Latinas suicidal behaviors, News

More mental health providers are customizing treatment for young Latinas, taking into consideration cultural pressures. (Image source: Gett Images/Adriana Varela Photography) When Norma Villalobos, 34, was a teen, she felt like she didn’t fit in. Her parents were born in Mexico … Read More Source: Culturally sensitive mental health treatments for young Latinas that work

American Family . About the Family. What It Means to Be Latino | PBS

Posted on Leave a commentPosted in Blog, Identity, Immigration, social identity-ethnicity

What it Means to be Latino It’s more complicated than you think. What does it mean to be Latino? We asked writer Ruben Martinez, UCLA linguistics professor Otto Santa Ana, and Fordham University sociologist Clara Rodriguez to address that question. In the essays that follow, you’ll find that their answers were all very different. Source: […]

Film in American Popular Culture

Posted on Leave a commentPosted in Acculturation, Blog, family dynamics, Identity, immigrant mothers, Immigration, Inequality, intersectionality, mother/daughter

AN INSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN STUDIES AND CREATIVE WRITING Real Women Have Curves, the 2002 film based on Josefina López’s two act play, politicizes the female form by strategically exposing and subverting dominant ideals about body image. López takes the overweight form, so often marginalized (like the immigrant) by society and popular culture, and redefines this […]

Culture / Acculturation

Posted on Posted in Acculturation, Blog, Identity, Immigration, Latinas suicidal behavior, Latinas suicidal behaviors, social identity-ethnicity, social identity-in-betwenness

To what culture would Latinas’ suicidal ideations and attempts be bound?     “Is Culture To Blame for High Latina Suicide Attempt Rates?” This is the actual title of an article published by NewsTaco, a Latino online source which provides innovative and insightful news, critique, analysis, and opinions. The headline of the article is significant […]

The Immigrant Paradox – Neatorama

Posted on Posted in acculturation-mental health, Blog, Immigration

Image source: Flickr Brown University – “The Immigrant Paradox” NY Times columnist David Brooks asks: Are new immigrants wrecking the social fabric of the United States? Or is it the other way around? Is America corrupting them instead? Back in 2010, researchers from Brown University have noticed that first generation immigrant children generally outperform second […]