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13 - Afro-Latinidad

Phoenix Rising from a Hemisphere’s Racist Flames

from Part II - The Roots and Routes of Latina/o Literature

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 February 2018

John Morán González
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Austin
Laura Lomas
Affiliation:
Rutgers University, New Jersey
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Summary

This entry offers an unconventional take on Afro-Latino identity by outlining a historical experience in which African-descended members of the US population who trace their origins to Latin America find themselves at the crossroads of two equally virulent traditions of negrophobic disparagement, one hailing from Latin America and the other from United States. In view of the reticence of US founding father Thomas Jefferson and Latin American Liberator Simon Bolivar to imagine people of African descent as citizens within the contours of the republic, the entry presents the black population of the hemisphere as confined to the condition of an unnatural social implant within the citizenry of the countries they inhabit. The very label “Afro-Latina/o” reveals the need of the population involved to claim a space of belonging outside both the Anglo and the Hispanic realms. The entry closes by viewing Afro-Latinidad as a site of belonging uniquely poised to deploy anti-racist paradigms that target Anglo and Hispanic branches of the hemisphere’s racist traditions simultaneously.
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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