Networks of Alterity in Syndemic Times: Sociodigital Media Controversy Around Racism in Mexico (original) (raw)

“We Are Not Racists, We Are Mexicans”: Privilege, Nationalism and Post-Race Ideology in Mexico

Critical Sociology, 2015

This article analyses the conflicting understandings surrounding the recognition of anti-black racism in Mexico drawing from an analysis of the 2005 controversy around Memín Pinguín. We ask what is at stake when opposition arises to claims of racism, how racial disavowal is possible, and how is it that the racial project of mestizaje (racial and cultural mixture) expresses a form of Mexican post-racial ideology. We argue that the ideology of mestizaje is key for unpacking the tensions between the recognition and disavowal of racism. Mestizaje solidifies into a form of nationalist denial in moments when racism is openly contested or brought up. It becomes a concrete strategy of power that is mobilized to simplify or divert attention in particular moments, such as with the Memín Pinguín controversy, when the contradictions within the social dynamic are revealed and questioned. Here is where Mexico’s “raceless” ideology of mestizaje overlaps with current post-racial politics. We explore state, elite and popular reactions to the debate to discuss how such public displays reflect an invested denial of race and racism while, at the same time, the racial status quo of mestizaje is reinforced. This, we argue, is the essence of post-racial politics in Mexico.

'La gente sucia': Racismo en espacios digitales durante el COVID-19 en contexto migratorio Sur-Sur / 'The Filthy People' : Racism in digital spaces during COVID-19 in the context of South-South migration (accepted article)

International Journal of Cultural Studies, 2022

Notions of 'race' and disease are deeply imbricated across the globe. This article explores the historical, complex entanglements between 'race', disease, and dirtiness in the multicultural Chilean context of COVID-19. We conducted a quantitative content analysis and a discourse analysis of online readers' comments (n=1,233) in a digital news platform surrounding a controversial news event to examine Chileans' cultural representations of Haitian migrants and explore online racism and anti-immigrant discourse. Drawing on a decolonial approach, we argue that the COVID-19 as a crisis has been fabricated at the expense of a constructed 'other'. We show how colonial racist logics not only endure in digital spaces, but are viralized in new ways by representing Haitian migrants as "filthy" and "disease carriers." We identified two contemporary forms of racism, online cultural racism and online aggressive racism, through which people construct imaginaries of racial superiority in digital spaces.

The Mexican Third Sector of the Media: The Long Run to Democratise the Mexican Communication System

Triple C, 2018

This article addresses the structural historical conditions of the Mexican communication system (MCS) in relation to the process of its democratisation. In order to analyse this process of democratisation, the research focused on the struggles of the third sector of the media – citizen/community/popular/free/alternative/radical/indigenous – to find room in that communication system. The aim was to highlight the structural inequality faced by this sector when compared with the hegemony of the private/commercial – or first – sector. From a normative perspective (McQuail 1992), a democratic and pluralistic communication system must have fair and equitable conditions among the three media sectors – private, public and citizen (La-Rue 2010) – with the aim of generating horizontal public spheres as a plural network of spaces for public conversation and deliberation on common issues (Dalhgren 2006). Acknowledgement: I am grateful to Ben Birkinbine and Graham Murdock for their careful review of this article and their feedback.

Latin American and Caribbean Ethnic Studies 'It's Not Race, It's Culture': Untangling Racial Politics in Mexico PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE

Mestizaje and ethnicity are key ideas that inform Mexico’ s 20th-century racial project. But while mestizaje –as an ideology, state project, and daily practice– has beendiscussed and criticized at length, these roles for ideas about ethnicity and diversity have not. This article deals with some of the theoretical and political implications of theuse of ethnicity for race studies in Mexico. The emergence of the idea of ethnicity in thelate 1930s was closely linked to the racial project of mestizaje and indigenismo, whichwas carried out by the formative Mexican state in the decades after the Revolution(1910 –1920) and continues to shape today’ s discourses of multicultural, intercultural,and racial relations in that country. The uncritical deployment of concepts of ethnicity and difference actually hinders the development of an understanding of racism and mestizaje focused squarely on domination.