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National narratives, institutional ideologies, and local talk: The discursive production of Spanish in a “new” US Latino community

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2014

Phillip M. Carter*
Affiliation:
Program in Linguistics, Florida International University, Deuxième Maison 453, 11200 SW 8th Street Miami, FL 33199, USApmcarter@fiu.edu

Abstract

This study investigates the figuration of “Spanish” as a sociocultural discourse within the context of a middle school in North Carolina, where immigration from Latin America is new, yet quickly accelerating. The school-based discourse is analyzed in terms of everyday ways of talking among students, as well as institutional ideologies and practices, which mediate national discourses about US Latinos and reinforce tropes circulated by students. Everyday ways of talking among non-Latino students suggest that Latinos—both immigrants and US born—are Spanish monolinguals who “choose” to be segregated from the English speakers. The use of Spanish by Latinos is constructed by non-Latinos as secretive and dangerous, linking local tropes about Spanish to national discourses. Consistent informal pressure against Spanish at school links to broader pressures against Spanish in the community and beyond. The discourse problematizes Latino identity formations and limits the types of identities available to Latino students. (Discursive production, Spanish, US Latinos, Latino threat narrative)*

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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