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Chicano Identity Research Paper

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Throughout history beginning with the Spanish inquisition, Chicanos have been overpowered, underestimated, exploited, and forgotten. Chicanos have been ripped from their dignity and viewed as ignorant, lazy, and uneducated. It was not till Rodolfo Corky Gonzalez created a poetic piece, “I am Joaquin”, that would change the way Mexicans thought of themselves for all eternity. No longer were they this broken social identity, but now they embraced being both the Mayan prince, and the sword and flame of Hernán Cortés, as stated by Gonzales, ultimately giving birth to the life changing social identity of Chicano. Over the decades, traditional Chicano social identity practiced a specific and powerful definition, nonetheless excluding several …show more content…

Central Americans contributed greatly to the definition of Chicano identity. The people from Central America, more specifically El Salvador are one of the few people who have to leave their families in order to come to American for a prosperous life. Transnational families in the twenty-first century are not uncommon since thousands of people cross the infamous border on the search for a better life, but what is unusual to have their stories shared and recognized by the rest (Abrejo 2). Similar to Mexican immigrants they too, cross the horrendous border in light of new opportunity, but are faced with a substantial amount of issues that can be life changing. As discussed by Abrejo in lecture, women were the leading gender that was migrating from El Salvador (Nov.10). Unlike Mexican families, the head of the home was the woman in Salvadorian families. Migration and family separation of Salvadorians are hardly mentioned in Chicano history. To migrate to the united stated Salvadorian people crossed Mexico in order to reach the United States. Even Mexico implemented border security in order for Salvadorians not to migrate. Salvadorians like women and the Chinese were just on a road on search for a better life and along that road their customs, tradition, heritage, sorrow, and pain were integrated among Chicano

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