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DOI: 10.1177/1468796803003004001 © 2003 SAGE Publications To be or not to be (Hispanic or Latino)Brazilian Racial and Ethnic Identity in the United StatesHarvard University, USA, marrow{at}wjh.harvard.edu I use 1990 US census data and 22 semi-structured interviews with Brazilian immigrant youth in Boston to show how Brazilians are becoming racialized into the black-white binary of American society, but how over time they manage to escape the downward mobility of Hispanic/Latino categorization by becoming American and playing off US natives Spanish-centered understanding of Hispanics/Latinos (which does not include them). Successful Americanization for Brazilians means not becoming part of a stigmatized Hispanic/Latino group associated with low socioeconomic status, racial discrimination and, on the heels of massive new immigration from Latin America, disempowered immigrant status - rather than becoming Hispanic/Latino as part and parcel of becoming American. The Brazilian case exposes some of the assumptions behind dominant US racial/ethnic categories (particularly white and black), and it lays bare the complexities and contradictions in the Hispanic/Latino panethnic category, pinpointing anew its racial basis and embedded immigrant analogy. That Hispanic/Latino classification continues to conflate race and immigrant status as US-bound immigration from Latin America has increased, expanded, and raised the foreign-born share of the US Hispanic/Latino population prompts a re-evaluation of who the group includes (and why or why not), as well as a reassessment of African American/Latino positions and relations in the US ethno-racial hierarchy.
Key Words: assimilation Brazil immigration panethnicity racialization
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