Latinitas – ¿Quien Soy Yo? / Who Am I?

Posted on Leave a commentPosted in Acculturation, Blog, family dynamics, Immigration, social identity-ethnicity, social identity-in-betwenness, transnationalism

Source: http://laslatinitas.com/teens/quien-soy-yo-who-am-i There are many things that shape who you are, your identity. For me, it deals with my name, nationality, roots, and family history. They have shaped me who I am today, but it hasn’t always been easy. So, who am I? My name is Ariadne and I am 24 years old. This is […]

Between harm and hope

Posted on Posted in Acculturation, acculturation-mental health, Blog, Immigration, Inequality, intersectionality, Latinas suicidal behavior, Latinas suicidal behaviors, power and priviledge, racial-ethnic inequality, social identity-class, social identity-ethnicity, social identity-gender, social identity-in-betwenness, social identity-race

At The Interstices Between Harm and Hope Frida Kahlo’s self-portrait “The Wounded Deer” (1946) speaks to this project’s many contradictions. This emotional painting depicts a flirtation with death—a frequent theme in Kahlo’s artistic work—but this piece in particular is a more literal expression of pain and a near-death experience: a perfect image to help me […]

Yo Soy Eva 7252013 on Vimeo

Posted on Leave a commentPosted in Identity, intersectionality, Poetry, power and priviledge, social identity-ethnicity, social identity-gender, social identity-in-betwenness, videos

Source: from Linda Garcia Merchant – Vimeo Written in 2010 by a group of teenage Latinas from Madison Wisconsin and Dr. Andrea ‘Tess’ Arenas, the Latina Poetry Project created a response to the iconic work that is Corky Gonzales’ “I Am Joaquin”. “Yo Soy Eva” answers the question asked by generations of Latinas. Soldadera, Curandera, […]

Living on the Border

Posted on Leave a commentPosted in acculturation-mental health, Blog, Identity, Immigration, Inequality, intersectionality, power and priviledge, racial-ethnic inequality, social identity-ethnicity, social identity-gender

Image source: Boston University Moving Borders Living on the Border: A Wound That Will Not Heal . . .The pain and joy of the borderlands–perhaps no greater or lesser than the emotions stirred by living anywhere contradictions abound, cultures clash and meld, and life is lived on an edge–come from a wound that will not […]

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: […]