Authors
Liliana Rivera Sánchez
Publication date
2004
Journal
Indigenous Mexican Migrants in the United States
Pages
417-446
Publisher
La Jolla, California, Center for US Mexican Studies
Description
This chapter explores ways in which Mexican immigrants organize in New York City, focusing particularly on the role that the Catholic Church has played in incorporating new immigrants through the Tepeyac Association. I first describe the main characteristics of Mexican immigration to New York and discuss the immigrants' organizational processes. I then outline the organizational structure of the Tepeyac Association, highlighting the profound impact it has had on New York's Mexican community. I also offer some insights into how the Tepeyac Association articulates two basic ideas as its organizational resources: Catholic beliefs-specifically the practices of traditional Mexican religiosity-and the" immigrant condition." Both resources reinforce a project of raising the public visibility of Mexican immigrants in New York. This strategy can also be interpreted as an effort to symbolically re-create an image of the Mexican nation and a national identity, even as migrants are in the midst of being displaced. In other words, it is an image of an incipient diaspora.
Total citations
20042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202112322313114211
Scholar articles
L Rivera Sánchez - Indigenous Mexican Migrants in the United States, 2004