On becoming Mexican in Napa: Mexican immigrant girls negotiating challenges to transnational identities

Author: Soto, Lilia

Source: Social Identities, Volume 18, Number 1, 1 January 2012 , pp. 19-37(19)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

This article examines the ethnic identity formation of high school aged Mexican immigrant adolescent girls. The ethnic identity is new to them and acts as a coping mechanism that allows them to confront the racial order and gender monitoring they experience at home and at their high school. Being Mexican allows them to make meaning of their immigrant experience. The author contends that these girls rather than disconnecting from their national ethnic identity are developing a stronger sense of being Mexican than if they had never left Mexico. However, developing a strong sense of being Mexican comes with challenges. This article is based on 20 unstructured interviews conducted at a local high school in Napa, California. The interviews trace the identity transitions and challenges each girl experienced both before migration and after they arrived in the US. The author finds that they develop an ethnic identity based on their memories of Mexico that they share amongst each other where they long to continue to be part of their old community. The stories of girls point to the identity transitions Mexican immigrant youth experience. Their stories also point to how identities are not clean sequential transitions, but are rather messy, conflicting, and contradictory.

Keywords: Mexican immigrants; adolescent girls; age; gender; transnational migration; transnational identities

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13504630.2012.629509

Affiliations: 1: American Studies & Chicano Studies,University of Wyoming, Laramie, USA

Publication date: 2012-01-01

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