2015
DOI: 10.1177/1468796814557651
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Intra-Latina/Latino encounters: Salvadoran and Mexican struggles and Salvadoran–Mexican subjectivities in Los Angeles

Abstract: In the last 30 years, the mass transnational migration of Salvadorans and Mexicans to the U.S. from their countries due to changes in the world capitalist system, and its specific effects on their homelands, has made Los Angeles the most Mexican and Salvadoranpopulated city in the United States. Within the everyday struggles of the working class in Los Angeles, an internal antagonism between these two Latina/Latino communities has developed that has divided them yet, dialectically, a sense of solidarity betwee… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…These forms of oppression are shared and contradict a U.S. hegemonic understanding of migration being tied to Mexico only, or systems being resisted only by Mexicans or Chicanxs. Throughout the activities, SB helped children speak broadly and collectively about their interests, eschewing Salvadoran-Mexican antagonisms (Osuna, 2015).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These forms of oppression are shared and contradict a U.S. hegemonic understanding of migration being tied to Mexico only, or systems being resisted only by Mexicans or Chicanxs. Throughout the activities, SB helped children speak broadly and collectively about their interests, eschewing Salvadoran-Mexican antagonisms (Osuna, 2015).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the dominance of scholarship on panethnicity, simultaneously some studies have shown the complexities of the Latino category through the examination of intragroup differences (Carey et al 2014;Garcia Belloda 2005;Mallet and Pinto-Coelho 2018;Osuna 2015;Schildkraut 2005). In studies that focus on intragroup experiences and actions, the picture of unity seems more complicated.…”
Section: Background On Latinos and Votingmentioning
confidence: 99%