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  1. Jul 31, 2017 · A frame of Critical Latinx Indigeneities allows us to forge a hemispheric analysis capable of examining more than one racial structure and the multiple colonial forces (re)shaping indigeneity (Castellanos et al. 2012).

  2. Oct 6, 2023 · García Peña’s Translating Blackness offers significant contributions to the field of Latina/o studies in the way it conceptualizes Black Latinidad and expands our understanding of who Latinx people are beyond the borders of the United States.

  3. Jul 1, 2021 · Black, Indigenous, and Latinx pasts are not mutually exclusive, but the tendency to think of US history as enclosed by continental borders and of race as a black-white binary hinders a more nuanced understanding of the insidious dynamics of white supremacism.

    • Tatiana Flores
    • 2021
  4. Feb 16, 2022 · Lamas goes to great lengths to recognize the blind spots that Latinx studies have had around indigeneity and blackness, but the book relies on a more-or-less conventional conception of Latin America that decolonial theorists have critiqued for reproducing indigenous erasure and anti-blackness.

    • John Alba Cutler
    • jalbacutler@berkeley.edu
  5. Mar 8, 2019 · Afro-Latinxs’ early racial socialization is marked by ethnoracial dissonance: a feeling of disidentification with, and from, racial schemas made available to them. Most respondents report that this dissonance is punctuated in secondary school and rarely reconciled through familial experiences.

  6. Translating Blackness is a welcomed intervention in the fields of Latino and Black studies. Using Black Latinidad as her conceptual lens, Peña interrogates how the historical nexus of race, colonialism, and immigration has shaped and continues to shape the ethnic, racial, and civic exclusion of Black lives in the Dominican Republic and the ...

  7. Jul 27, 2023 · While Black erasure has characterized the field of Latinx Studies, we are witnessing a paradigm shift led by AfroLatinx cultural producers and scholars who are confronting the erasure of Black histories and voices from latinidad.