<p>1. Introduction - Lourdes Torres and Marisa Alicea.- 2. Jennifer as Selena: Rethinking Latinidad in Media and Popular Culture - Frances R. Aparicio.- 3. The Central American Transnational Imaginary: Defining the Transnational and Gendered Contours of Central American Immigrant Experience - Yajaira M. Padilla.- 4. Dora the Explorer, Constructing “Latinidades” and the Politics of Global Citizenship - Nicole M. Guidotti-Hernández.- 5. Making Masculinity: Negotiations of Gender Presentation Among Latino Gay Men - Anthony Ocampo.- 6. “Wild Tongues Can’t be Tamed”: Rumor, Racialized Sexuality, and the 1917 Bath Riots in the US-Mexico Borderlands - Tala Khanmalek.- 7. Inventing the Race: Latinos and the Ethnoracial Pentagon - Silvio Torres-Saillant.- 8. Latinos as the “Living Dead”: Raciality, Expendability, and Border Militarization - John D. Márquez.- 9. TWB (Talking while Bilingual): Linguistic Profiling ofLatina/os, and other Linguistic torquemadas - Ana Celia Zentella.- 10. Critical Latinx Indigeneities: A Paradigm Drift - María Josefina Saldaña-Portillo.- 11. “Better than White Trash”: Work Ethic, Latinidad and Whiteness in Rural Arkansas - Miranda Cady Hallett.- 12. “I Can’t Go to College Because I Don’t Have Papers”: Incorporation Patterns of Latino Undocumented Youth - Leisy J. Abrego.- 13. The Invisibility of Farmworkers: Implications and Remedies - Ken Saldanha.- 14. Latino Immigrant Men and the Deportation Crisis: A Gendered Racial Removal Program -Tanya Golash-Boza and Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo.- 15. Pursuant to Deportation: Latinos and Immigrant Detention - David Hernández.- 16. Dispatches from the “Viejo” New South: Historicizing Recent Latino Migrations - Julie M. Weise.- 17. The Legal Production of Mexican/Migrant “Illegality” - Nicholas De Genova.- 18. Central American Immigrant Workers and Legal Violence in Phoenix, Arizona - Cecilia Menjíva.- 19. Delinquent Citizenship, National Performances: Racialization, Surveillance, and the Politics of “Worthiness” in Puerto Rican Chicago - Ana Y. Ramos-Zayas.- 20. Beyond Resistance in Dominican American Women’s Fiction: Healing and Growth through the Spectrum of Quietude in Angie Cruz’s Soledad and Naima Coster’s Halsey Street.- Regina Marie Mills.- 21. Disposable Subjects: The Racial Normativity of Neoliberalism and Latino Immigrants - Raymond Rocco<br></p><p></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><br><p></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p> </p><p> </p>
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