Mobilizing the U.S. Latinx Vote

Mobilizing the U.S. Latinx Vote

Media, Identity, and Politics

Soto-Vasquez, Arthur D.

Taylor & Francis Ltd

02/2020

142

Dura

Inglês

9780367418427

15 a 20 dias

272

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction: Dreams of a United Latinx Polity





Cultural and Political Change Meets Latinxs



Introducing the Mediation of U.S. Latinx Identity



Methodology



Outline of Chapters




The Mediation of Latinx Identity Before the Internet





A Note on Terminology



Contextualizing the Political and Economic Moment



Racial Formation Theory Applied



Minimization of Difference



Denationalization



Racialization




New Media and U.S. Latinx Identity





Naming in a Networked Society



The "New Latino" and Online Expression



Navigating American Democracy Online as a Latinx




Political Mobilization in the Post-Modern Digital Era





Digital Politics-Tools, Opportunities, and Vulnerabilities



Campaigns and Political Advertising Online



Voters as Audience-identity Constructions



Post-modern Identity and Politics



Towards a "New Latino" Hybrid




The Professional Political Class of U.S. Latinxs





Minimization of Difference



Denationalization



Racialization



Other Emergent Themes




Latinx Presentation, Digital Representation





Platforms and Messages



The End of DACA



The Shutdown



The 2018 Texas Democratic Primary



New Tools, Old Practices?




Media Coverage of the 2018 Midterms





How the Media Talked About Latinx Voters



Minimization of Difference



Denationalization



Racialization



Telling the Latinx Story




Conclusion





Findings Summarized



Contributions Summarized



Limitations of Study



Recommendations



Future Directions
Latinx Identity;North American Free Trade Agreement;political mobilization;DACA Recipient;racial system;Eisenhower Executive Office Building;U.S. Latinx vote;UCLA High Education Research Institute;American political system;Familial Social Capital;Occupy Wall Street;Americanized Latinx;Average GPA;Political Advertisers;Public Engagement;DACA;Latinx People;Latinx Community;Foundational Funding;Latinx Population;Spanish Language;Latinx Youth;NCLR;Spanish Language News;United States;Geo Group;NALEO;Tom Shoe;Latino Voters