Full Description
A new framework for understanding how language and identity intersect in ever-evolving America
In the 1980s, Washington, DC—a predominantly African American, racially and economically segregated city with a strong local Black culture—became a hub of Latin American immigration. As the city's communities interacted, an identity both unique to DC and reflective of diverse Latin American cultures was born.
Empanadas, Pupusas, and Greens on the Side is the first linguistics book to explore how the Latinx community forged a new sense of home and identity in Washington. Using original ethnographic research—including interviews, narratives, and surveys—Tseng develops a new framework for understanding the relationship between race, identity, language, and culture, and she explains what happens when communities interact.
Readers interested in the cultural history of Washington, Latinx history, and language and society will enjoy this rich study of language as a cross-cultural current in ever-evolving America.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Transcription Conventions
Introduction
1. Languaging Identity in the Nation's Capital: Raciomultilingual Dynamics in Washington, DC
2. "Empanadas, Pupusas, and Greens on the Side": DC Latinidad
3. "En la viña de Dios hay de todo": Spanish and Identity
4. "Blacks and Latinos sort of roll in the same circles": Sociolinguistic Socialization
5. "¿Qué pasó vos?" Voicing the Raciomultilingual Self and Other
6. "We're Washingtonians": Constructing Local Identity and Authenticity
Conclusion: "We're so rich with different types of culture"
Bibliography
About the Author
Index



