Drawn from her award-winning book Making the Latino South, this talk will trace the long history of Latinos in the South and show why being Latino in the South was unlike being Latino anywhere else in the country.
Friday, December 13, 2024
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM
Remote
Co-Sponsored with UCSD’s Center for Comparative Immigration Studies and with the Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative
Abstract: In the 1940s South, it seemed that non-Black Latino people were on the road to whiteness. In fact, in many places throughout the region governed by Jim Crow, they were able to attend white schools, live in white neighborhoods, and marry white southerners. However, by the early 2000s, Latino people in the South were routinely cast as "illegal aliens" and targeted by some of the harshest anti-immigrant legislation in the country. This book helps explain how race evolved so dramatically for this population over the course of the second half of the twentieth century.
Cecilia Márquez guides readers through time and place from Washington, DC, to the deep South, tracing how non-Black Latino people moved through the region’s evolving racial landscape. In considering Latino presence in the South’s schools, its workplaces, its tourist destinations, and more, Márquez tells a challenging story of race-making that defies easy narratives of progressive change and promises to reshape the broader American histories of Jim Crow, the civil rights movement, immigration, work, and culture.
Sponsor(s): Center for Study of International Migration, UCSD's Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative