Borderlands: facts and fictions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 52
About This Presentation
Title:

Borderlands: facts and fictions

Description:

Mexican National Culture. U.S. Western Culture (mythology) Popular (mass) Culture both sides ... Mexico: border states' poverty rate is 28% (37% nationally) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:716
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 53
Provided by: engl202
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Borderlands: facts and fictions


1
Borderlandsfacts and fictions
2
  • A border is
  • an imaginary line between
  • two nations, separating the
  • imaginary rights of one
  • from the imaginary rights
  • of another
  • Ambrose Bierce

3
An elastic geo-cultural landscape
  • El Norte
  • La Línea
  • The Southwest
  • Aztlán
  • The Frontier
  • Desert Country
  • The Margin
  • The Edge

4
A meeting place of
  • Two countries
  • Two cultures
  • Two ways of life
  • Two levels of consumption
  • Two infrastructures

Inherent inequality Inherent opportunity
5
The border is both
  • Hard realities
  • politics
  • economics
  • legislation
  • demographics
  • environment
  • law enforcement
  • national security

6
  • Soft expressions
  • language
  • emotions
  • rituals
  • art
  • work
  • memory
  • community
  • hope

7
The Border is a tangible artifact imposed upon
the human populations and the natural geography
8
The Border is an intercultural world unto
itself
9
Views of the Border
  • Romantic
  • something falls off you when you cross the
    border into Mexico, and suddenly the landscape
    hits you with nothing between it, desert and
    mountains and vultures
  • William Burroughs

10
  • Harsh
  • On the US side everything was calm and
    reassuring, everything uniform.on the other
    side, a swarming mysterious world where furtive
    figures prowled on every corner of darkness and
    one sensed human heat, and gestures, and
    whispers.
  • Georges Simenon

11
Views of the Border
  • Parody
  • Americans have not looked for a Mexico in
    Mexico they have looked for their obsessions,
    enthusiasms, phobias, hopes, interests---and
    these are what they have found
  • Octavio Paz

12
BorderLore(stories of the people)
  • Vernacular cultural knowledge and practices
  • Groups loosely or formally organized (ethnicity,
    occupation, religion, age, etc)
  • informal learning
  • Artistic communication
  • Verbal, Material, Customary things people say,
    make, do.

13
An extensive inventory
  • Ancient /indigenous

14
Spanish cultural imports
15
Mexican National Culture
16
U.S. Western Culture (mythology)
17
Popular (mass) Culture both sides
18
Social Stratification
  • Working class and acomodados
  • Rural and urban
  • English and Spanish monolingual
  • Bilingual
  • Natives and Settlers
  • Mexicanos and Americanos
  • Desert rats and day-trippers
  • Ecologists and Developers
  • Outlaws and Law Enforcement agents

19
Cultural Fusion..Cultural Conflict
20
Regional Variation
Cultural Clusters
  • Lower Rio Grande or Tejano Culture
  • (from both Laredos to Gulf)
  • West Texan (El Paso and Juarez)
  • New Mexican Hispano
  • Cultura Norteña
  • (Sonora, Sinaloa, Durango beef and cheese
    country)
  • Baja and Alta California

21
Hybrid Inventions
  • Speech
  • New Words
  • gringo, wetback, dogo
  • Caló Me explico Federico?
  • Me entiendes Mendez?
  • Mock Spanish
  • (Casa de Laundry)

22
Spanglish / code-switchingÁbrela tú. Por qué
yo? Tú tienes las keys. Yo te las entregué a ti.
Además, I left mine adentro.
23
Vernacular Foods
  • Quesadilla Imuris, Sonora
  • Margaritas Tijuana, BC
  • Chimichanga Tucson, AZ
  • Fajitas San Antonio, Texas

24
Folk Objects
  • Vernacular Architecture
  • Decorative Arts
  • Religious Folk Art
  • Tourist Artifacts

25
Customs
  • Quinceañeras
  • Weddings
  • Baptism
  • Funerals
  • Barbacoas
  • Curanderas

26
The border happens in and through
  • State Power
  • Imagination
  • Desire
  • Folk Life
  • Work

27
The border produces
  • Millions of workers essential to the economic
    machines of North American agriculture, tourism,
    and industry farmworkers, low-tech labor,
    dishwashers, gardeners, maids..
  • but also a military machine of low-intensity
    conflict INS helicopters, Border Patrol agents,
    infrared cameras, detention centers, books of
    regulations

28
Border is also.a discourse of sadness
  • Violence and death are dimensions of everyday
    life in the border zone

Women of Juarez Desert Crossers Drug-related
deaths Toxic illnesses
29
Factual Border Matters
  • 2,000 mile stretch
  • 4 U.S. states
  • (CA, AZ, NM, TX)
  • 6 Mexican states
  • (BC, SON, CH, COH, NL, TML)
  • 60 mile zone from the line on each side
  • Natural barriers Rio Grande, Sonoran and
    Chihuahuan Deserts

30
Population
  • 12 million people in border region
  • On U.S. side 19 below poverty line (13
    nationally)
  • On U.S. side 50 are Hispanic
  • Mexico border states poverty rate is 28 (37
    nationally)
  • In TX and NM 300,000 people live in 1,300
    colonias
  • 12 million people living in US illegally
  • Approximately 6.2 million (56) are from Mexico
  • Health problems
  • Sanitation
  • Pollution
  • Movement
  • Access

31
Crossings
  • Most frequently crossed international border in
    the world
  • 350 million people cross legally every year ---
    1 million cross illegally
  • 45 agricultural workers in US are here illegally
  • 12,000 trucks cross border daily (up 63 since
    1994 when NAFTA was enacted)
  • 660, 000 people cross every day legally
  • 35 points of entry
  • 20 crossing into US are on foot
  • In 2004, pedestrian crossing in Texas
  • alone was 20 million

32
Economy
  • US is Mexicos 1 trading partner
  • Mexico is USs 2 trading partner
  • 795 million traded every day
  • 2,7000 maquiladoras in Mex. Border states
  • Average maquiladora salary 45 per week

Average maquiladora work week 48 hours
33
Historical Border

34
Chronology of a Fence
  • 1819
  • Adams- Onis Treaty
  • between Spain and US
  • 1821
  • Mexican Independence
  • Mexico permits Texas settlement
  • 1836
  • Texas Independence
  • 1846
  • Mexico-US War

1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo 1853 Gadsden
Purchase
35
  • 1849
  • Gold discovered in CA
  • 1882
  • Chinese Exclusionary Act
  • (railroad and mining workers)
  • 1904
  • Border Patrol established
  • 1910
  • Mexican Revolution begins
  • 1921
  • Immigration Act (Quotas)
  • 1924
  • Border stations established
  • 1942
  • Bracero Program

1948 Mexican-American GI Forum 1953 Operation
Wetback deports 3.8 million 1962 Cesar Chavez
organizes farm workers in Delano, CA
36
  • 1964
  • First Maquiladoras (BIP)
  • Bracero Program repealed
  • 1965
  • Immigration and Naturalization Act
  • (family reunification / skills)
  • 1982
  • Peso devaluation crisis in MX
  • 1986
  • IRCA (hiring of illegal aliens a crime)
  • 1994
  • NAFTA enacted
  • Zapatista Army rebellion
  • Operation Gatekeeper
  • 1996
  • Immigration Reform Act

BP agents 11,000 (89 at US- Mex border) Bush
at the end of 2008, 6,000 more agents 2005 473
migrant deaths 2,570 rescued Surveillance
includes electronic sensors, night vision
scopes, aircraft, ground vehicles Current
security contract RFP 2 billion
37
Major arguments Against Immigration
  • --Security
  • --Taxes
  • --Crime
  • --Welfare
  • --Jobs
  • --Ecology
  • --Language
  • --Culture

38
Major arguments For Immigration
  • --Remittances (12 Billion)
  • --Globalization -Jobs
  • --Family
  • --Wealth Disparity
  • --History
  • --Exploitation/Crime
  • --Culture

39
Words cant hurt me?
  • Illegal alien? (beaner?)
  • Illegal immigrant? (wetback?)
  • Undocumented worker? (greaser?)
  • OTM Other than Mexican

40
Effects of criminalization discourse
  • Create class of persons,
  • --legal
  • --illegal
  • Social reality vs. legal status
  • Emphasis on control
  • Rise of oppositional moral discourse
  • --deserving v. undeserving
  • --just v. unjust deportations
  • Administrative apparatus to unmake illegality

Mae Ngai, Impossible Subjects Illegal Aliens
and the Making of Modern America
41
The border is a placebut it is also an idea
  • Some people think border is a perfect metaphor
    to talk about identity.

Some people think border is a perfect metaphor
to talk about the conditions that frame life in
the world today
42
Border v. Borderlands
  • A border is a dividing line, a narrow strip
    along a steep edge.
  • A borderland is a vague and undetermined place
    created by the emotional residue of an unnatural
    boundary

Gloria Anzaldúa
43
For Anzaldúa, there are two border territories
  • The actual physical borderland that I am
    dealing withis the US Southwest-Mexican border
    The psychological borderlands, the sexual
    borderlands and the spiritual borderlands are not
    particular to the Southwest..in fact.

44
  • the Borderlands are physically present wherever
    two or more cultures edge each other, where
    people of different races occupy the same
    territory, where under, lower, middle and upper
    classes touch, where the space between two
    individuals shrinks with intimacy

Borderlands/La Frontera The New Mestiza, 1987
45
Why metaphor?
  • Metaphors are pervasive in everyday life
  • Our ordinary conceptual system is fundamentally
    metaphorical in nature
  • Metaphors structure how we perceive, think, act

A Concept argument Conceptual Metaphor
argument is war Everyday Language He attacked
every point Ive never won an argument with
you She shot down all my points His
criticism was right on target
46
Metaphors.
  • Enliven ordinary language
  • Encourage interpretation
  • Maximum meaning with minimum words
  • Create new meanings
  • Express things for which there are no easy words

47
Guillermo Gomez - Peñas border metaphors
  • I live smack in the fissure between two worlds,
    in the infected wound

48
Too much metaphor?
  • Anthropologist Alejandro Lugo thinks the phrase
    border crossing as a metaphor for identity has
    become overly optimistic.
  • Border inspections are actually more pervasive
    than border crossings in the lives of most
    people at the physical border.

49
Luis Alfaros border dilemmas
I am a Queer Chicano A native in no land An
orphan of Aztlan The pocho son of farm worker
parents The Mexicans only want me when they want
me to talk about Mexico But what about Mexican
Queers in LA? The Queers only want me when they
need to add color add spice like salsa
picante on the side
With one foot on each side of the border not the
border between Mexico and the United States but
the border between Nationality and Sexuality I
search for a home in both yet neither one
believes that I exist.
50
What kinds of border inspectionsand border
crossingshave you experienced?
51
  • Can the border withstand being a buzzword for
    theories of power, struggle, and connection?

52
Developing a critical conscience about uses of
metaphor.
  • What kinds of issues are border metaphors useful
    for?
  • Are there instances in which this metaphor is not
    helpful?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com