344
Views
6
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
ARTICLES

The Construction of Brownness: Latino/a and South Asian Bloggers' Responses to SB 1070

References

  • Alcoff, L.M. (2006). Visible identities: Race, gender, and the self. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
  • Amaya, H. (2007a). Amores perros and racialised masculinities in contemporary Mexico. New Cinemas: Journal of Contemporary Film, 5(3), 201–216. doi:10.1386/ncin.5.3.201/1
  • Amaya, H. (2007b). Performing acculturation: Rewriting the Latina/o immigrant self. Text and Performance Quarterly, 27(3), 194–212.
  • Anguiano, C.A., & Chávez, K.R. (2011). DREAMers' discourse: Young Latino/a immigrants and the naturalization of the American Dream. In M.A. Holling & B.M. Calafell (Eds.), Latino/a discourses in vernacular spaces: Somos de una voz (pp. 81–99). Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
  • Berg, J.A. (2009). White public opinion toward undocumented immigrants: Threat and interpersonal environment. Sociological Perspectives, 52(1), 39–58.
  • Bonilla-Silva, E. (2004). From biracial to tri-racial: Towards a new system of racial stratification in the USA. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 27(6), 931–950.
  • Bonilla-Silva, E. (2009). Racism without racists: Color-blind racism and the persistence of racial inequality in America. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
  • Burman, J. (2010). Suspects in the city: Browning the ‘not-quite’ Canadian citizen. Cultural Studies, 24(2), 200–213.
  • Calvente, L.B.Y. (2011). “This is one line you won't have to worry about crossing”: Crossing borders and becoming. In M.A. Holling & B.M. Calafell (Eds.), Latino/a discourses in vernacular spaces: Somos de una voz (pp. 185–201). Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
  • Camacho, A.S. (2008). Migrant imaginaries: Latino cultural politics in the U.S.–Mexico borderlands. New York, NY: New York University Press.
  • Chávez, K.R. (2009). Exploring the defeat of Arizona's marriage amendment and the specter of the immigrant as queer. Southern Communication Journal, 74(3), 314–324.
  • Chávez, K.R. (2010). Border (in)securities: Normative and differential belonging in LGBTQ and immigrant rights discourse. Communication & Critical/Cultural Studies, 7(2), 136–155.
  • Chávez, L. (2008). The Latino threat: Constructing immigrants, citizens, and the nation. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Cisneros, J.D. (2012). Looking “illegal”: Affect, rhetoric, and performativity in Arizona's Senate Bill 1070. In D.R. DeChaine (Ed.), Border rhetorics: Citizenship and identity on the US-Mexico frontier (pp. 133–150). Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press.
  • Collier, M.J. (2005). Theorizing cultural identifications: Critical updates and continuing evolution. In W.B. Gudykunst (Ed.), Theorizing about intercultural communication (pp. 235–256). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
  • Collins, P.H. (2005). Black sexual politics: African Americans, gender, and the new racism. New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Córdova, N.I. (2011). Nuestro Himno as heterotopic mimicry: On the ambivalences of a Latin@ voicing. In M.A. Holling & B.M. Calafell (Eds.), Latino/a discourses in vernacular spaces: Somos de una voz (pp. 101–22). Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
  • Das Gupta, M. (2006). Unruly immigrants: Rights, activism, and transnational South Asian politics in the United States. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
  • Delgado, F. (2009). Reflections on being/performing Latino identity in the academy. Text and Performance Quarterly, 29(2), 149–164
  • Delgado, R., & Stefancic, J. (2000). Latino/a critical (“latcrit”) legal studies: Review essay. Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 25(2), 161–189.
  • Deliovsky, K., & Kitossa, T. (2013). Beyond black and white: When going beyond may take us out of bounds. Journal of Black Studies, 44(2), 158–181.
  • Dick, H.P. (2011). Making immigrants illegal in small-town USA. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, 21(1), E35–E55.
  • Dickinson, G. (2002). Joe's rhetoric: Finding authenticity at Starbucks. Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 32(4), 5–27. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org
  • Drzewiecka, J.A. (2002). Reinventing and contesting identities in constitutive discourses: Between diaspora and its others. Communication Quarterly, 50(1), 1–23.
  • Drzewiecka, J.A., & Halualani, R.T. (2002). The structural-cultural dialectic of diasporic politics. Communication Theory, 12(3): 340–366.
  • Drzewiecka, J.A., & Steyn, M. (2012). Racial immigrant incorporation: Material-symbolic articulation of identities. Journal of International and Intercultural Communication, 5(1), 1–19.
  • Durham, M.G. (2001). Displaced persons: Symbols of South Asian femininity and the returned gaze in U.S. media culture. Communication Theory, 11(2), 201–217.
  • Durham, M.G. (2004). Constructing the “new ethnicities”: Media, sexuality, and diaspora identity in the lives of South Asian immigrant girls. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 21(2), 140–161.
  • Enck-Wanzer, D. (2011). Race, coloniality, and geo-body politics: The Garden as Latin@ vernacular discourse. Environmental Communication, 5(3), 363–371.
  • Flores, L.A. (2003). Constructing rhetorical borders: Peons, illegal aliens, and competing narratives of immigration. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 20(4), 362–387.
  • Flores, L.A., Moon, D.G., & Nakayama, T.K. (2006). Dynamic rhetorics of race: California's racial privacy initiative and the shifting grounds of racial politics. Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, 3(3), 181–201.
  • Frost, H. (2010). Being “brown” in a Canadian suburb. Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, 8(2), 212–232.
  • Gajjala, R. (2006). Consuming/producing/inhabiting South-Asian digital diasporas. New Media & Society, 8(2), 179–185.
  • Hall, S. (1993). Cultural identity and diaspora. Colonial discourse and postcolonial theory: A reader.
  • Halualani, R.T. (2011). Abstracting and de-racializing diversity: The articulation of diversity in the post-race era. In M.G. Lacy & K.A. Ono (Eds.), Critical rhetorics of race (pp. 247–264). New York, NY: New York University Press.
  • Halualani, R.T. (2008). “Where exactly is the pacific?”: Global migrations, diasporic movements, and intercultural communication. Journal of International and Intercultural Communication, 1(1), 3–22.
  • Hasian Jr., M., & Delgado, F. (1998). The trials and tribulations of racialized critical rhetorical theory: Understanding the rhetorical ambiguities of Proposition 187. Communication Theory, 8(3), 245–270.
  • Hayden, B. (2010). Impeach the traitors: Citizenship, sovereignty and nation in immigration control activism in the United States. Social Semiotics, 20(2), 155–174.
  • Hegde, R. (1996). Narratives of silence: Rethinking gender, agency, and power from the communication experiences of battered women in South India. Communication Studies, 47(4), 303–317.
  • Holling, M.A. (2006). Forming oppositional social concord to California's Proposition 187 and squelching social discord in the vernacular space of CHICLE. Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, 3(3), 202–222.
  • Holling, M.A. (2011). Patrolling national identity, masking white supremacy: The minuteman project. In M.G. Lacy & K.A. Ono (Eds.), Critical rhetorics of race (pp. 98–116). New York, NY: New York University Press.
  • Holling, M.A., & Calafell, B.M. (2011). Latino/a discourses in vernacular spaces: Somos de una voz. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
  • Hookway, N. (2008). “Entering the blogosphere”: Some strategies for using blogs in social research. Qualitative Research, 8(1), 91–113.
  • Howard, R.G. (2008a). Electronic hybridity: The persistent processes of the vernacular web. Journal of American Folklore, 121, 192–218.
  • Howard, R.G. (2008b). The vernacular web of participatory media. Critical Studies in Media Communication, 25(5), 490–513.
  • Lugo-Lugo, C.R., & Bloodsworth-Lugo, M.K. (2010). 475° from September 11: Citizenship, immigration, same-sex marriage, and the browning of terror. Cultural Studies, 24(2), 234–255.
  • Martínez, E. (1993). Beyond black/white: The racisms of our time, Social Justice, 20(1/2), 22–34.
  • Ngai, M. (2004). Impossible subjects: Illegal aliens and the making of modern America. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Omi, M., & Winant, H. (1994). Racial formation in the United States: From the 1960s to the 1990s. New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Ono, K.A., & Sloop, J.M. (1995). The critique of vernacular discourse. Communication Monographs, 62(1), 19–46.
  • Ono, K.A., & Sloop, J.M. (2002). Shifting borders: Rhetoric, immigration, and California's Proposition 187. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
  • Parameswaran, R., & Cardoza, K. (2009). Melanin on the margins: Advertising and the cultural politics of fair/light/white beauty in India. Journalism & Communication Monographs, 11(3), 213–274.
  • Perea, J.F. (1997). The black/white binary paradigm of race: The ‘normal science’ of American racial thought. California Law Review, 85, 1213–1258.
  • Potter, J.E. (2014). Brown-skinned outlaws: An ideographic analysis of “illegal(s).” Communication, Culture, & Critique, 7(2), 228–245.
  • Prashad, V. (2000). The karma of brown folk. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Rosaldo, R. (1997). Cultural citizenship, inequality, and multiculturalism. In W.V. Flores & R. Benmayor (Eds.), Latino cultural citizenship (pp. 27–38). Boston, MA: Beacon Press.
  • Sacirbey, O. (2012, 17 August). Muslims take special precautions for Eid Ul-Fitr. Huffington Post. Retrieved from http://www.huffingtonpost.com
  • Sandoval, Jr., T.F.S. (2008). Disobedient bodies: Racialization, resistance, and the mass (re)articulation of the Mexican immigrant body. American Behavioral Scientist, 52(4), 580–597.
  • Semati, M. (2010). Islamophobia, culture and race in the age of empire. Cultural Studies, 24(2), 256–275.
  • Sharma, S. (2010). Taxi cab publics and the production of brown space after 9/11. Cultural Studies, 24(2), 183–199.
  • Silva, K. (2010). Brown: From identity to identification. Cultural Studies, 24(2), 167–182.
  • Streich, G.W. (2009). Discourses of American national identity: Echoes and lessons from the 1910s–1920s. Citizenship Studies, 13(3), 267–287.
  • Sundar, P. (2008). To “brown it up” or to “bring down the brown”: Identity and strategy in second-generation, South Asian-Canadian youth. Journal of Ethnic & Cultural Diversity in Social Work, 17(3), 251–278.
  • Thangaraj, S. (2012). Playing through differences: Black–white racial logic and interrogating South Asian American identity. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 35(6), 988–1006.
  • Wu, F. (2003). Yellow: Race in America beyond black and white. New York, NY: Basic Books.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.