Followers will know that Deldelp Medina and I have a session submission in to SXSW.
One of the things that SXSW is very clear about is that your session should answer 5 questions that you need to articulate before you can submit. The five questions we came up with are these:
- Why isn’t our generation of Latinos considered exceptional?
- How do we become visible in the media landscape without being reduced to the lowest common denominator?
- How will bi-culturalism replace bi-lingualism for our children; what can we gain and what are we afraid to lose?
- Are we the wrong kind of brown when it comes to entrepreneurship?
- Why do we hold onto our cultural baggage: racism, misogyny, & homophobia?
We developed these questions out of our own experiences. These are conversations that happen in living rooms and bars when smart, thoughtful people get together; but, the conversation isn’t happening in a larger forum where it belongs.
This past Monday, a paper was presented from the University of Cincinnati called “Who “They” Are Matters: Researchers Assess Immigrant Stereotypes And Views On Immigration“. Turns out, sociologists have done some research on the topic and indeed, we ARE the wrong kind of brown when it comes to entrepreneurship. Americans have a decidedly negative view of latinos and feel that we are a drain on the economy, even though we build businesses and contribute more than we take away. Again, the facts don’t matter here, only the Fox news-branded perception.
So what changes these small-minded perceptions? Clearly not facts. I think it is personal experience. Do you know a smart latino? Maybe you don’t think of that person as an immigrant? I grew up in a middle class suburb. Do I “act” like a latino? What would you think about me if you met me on the street? One of the reasons this study is so compelling is that they purposefully took a group of people from Ohio, a place where the immigrant and latino populations are far below the national average, a place where people could reasonably be expected to NOT have any day to day contact with either a latino or an immigrant. Guess who shapes those views in the absence of experience?
I have no silver lining today. I’m just annoyed. It’s one thing to think or feel something. It’s quite another to have it proven to you that people you’ve never met think that you and your children are worthless.
Help us bring this conversation into the light of day. Vote for us here, the process is kind of a pain, but we’d be very appreciative!
Done and done.
Thanks Gorgeous! You know I’ll let you know how it turns out!
Hey SBG I’d love to chat with you about this. I worked in Latino television in the late 90′s (hobo you like that phrase for dating yourself) and I realized that once latinos assimilate they don’t want ti consider themsleves Latino. They want to think of themselves as white.
Hey TP, my BA is in theater and while I never wanted anyone to tell me what kinds of roles I should take, I never thought of myself as white. Now, I’m ambiguously beige, when I’m in the Mediterranean belt of the world people assume I belong to them, but I don’t exactly “pass” for white, and don’t think of myself that way.
Now, my parents – one a Peruvian immigrant, one a first generation Mexican American – absolutely prized assimilation. But I absolutely consider myself Latino, and I consider my children Latino.
How do you think that this plays across generations? Is it a pendulum?