2018
DOI: 10.1093/socpro/spy026
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Language and (Re)Negotiations of Latinx Identity: Latinx Parents’ Approaches to Spanish and Bilingualism

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Business owners were asked about their familial, educational, and work backgrounds, business start‐up process, customer demographics and interactions, and their social ties to their surrounding neighborhoods. To categorize these Latina business owners as middle‐class, Santellano drew on four traditional indicators of middle‐class status: a college education, home ownership, employment in a white‐collar occupation and/or own business and having a household income over the national median (Garcia, 2020; Vallejo, 2012). Like scholars of the Latinx middle class, Santellano recognizes that the institutional racism and discrimination toward Latinxs make it difficult for middle‐class Latinxs to meet the same middle‐class markers as white Americans.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Business owners were asked about their familial, educational, and work backgrounds, business start‐up process, customer demographics and interactions, and their social ties to their surrounding neighborhoods. To categorize these Latina business owners as middle‐class, Santellano drew on four traditional indicators of middle‐class status: a college education, home ownership, employment in a white‐collar occupation and/or own business and having a household income over the national median (Garcia, 2020; Vallejo, 2012). Like scholars of the Latinx middle class, Santellano recognizes that the institutional racism and discrimination toward Latinxs make it difficult for middle‐class Latinxs to meet the same middle‐class markers as white Americans.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Like scholars of the Latinx middle class, Santellano recognizes that the institutional racism and discrimination toward Latinxs make it difficult for middle‐class Latinxs to meet the same middle‐class markers as white Americans. She follows past scholars' steps in not restricting eligibility for this study if Latinx coffee shop owners could not meet all four indicators (Garcia, 2020; Vallejo, 2012). Informed by constructivist grounded theory and Chicana Feminist tradition, the author engaged in various rounds of coding interviews to understand how group and structural‐level forces informed the experiences of Latina study participants, allowing for participants to engage in their theory‐building related to their entrepreneurial work (Charmaz, 2014; Delgado Bernal et al., 2012; Valdez & Golash‐Boza, 2017).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What about Latinx panethnicity? According to a study conducted by García (2020) on Latinx parents´ approaches to bilingualism, Spanish is relevant to claiming a Latinx identity. It is a situational pressure that Latinx negotiate regarding Spanish.…”
Section: Language Ideologies In the Spanish Heritage Classroommentioning
confidence: 99%