The Social Production of Latin@ Visibilities and Invisibilities: Geographies of Power in Small Town America |
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Authors: | Adela C. Licona Marta Maria Maldonado |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of English, University of Arizona, , Tucson, AZ, USA;2. Department of Sociology, Iowa State University, , Ames, IA, USA |
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Abstract: | This paper explores the sociospatial dynamics unfolding in Perry, a rural Iowa town that has been facing rapid change since the 1990s due to growing Latin@ settlement. We focus on what we call the social production of Latin@ visibilities and invisibilities: spatialized practices by individuals, families, communities, and institutions that render different Latin@ groups visible or invisible, with repercussions for survival, community integration, and political praxis. We discuss the border within as an extension of border politics and borderlands rhetorics to the US “heartland”, and how the entrenchment of a regime of deportability creates racialized and gendered conditions for the in/visibility of Latin@ immigrants and Latin@s more broadly. We conclude by considering some of the theoretical and political implications of our analysis for such geographies of power and the social relations, locations, and discourses that constitute and are constituted by them. |
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Keywords: | Latin@s immigrants visibility and invisibility regime of deportability border within geographies of power |
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