民族志
公民身份
能见度
移民
社会学
身份(音乐)
民族
种族(生物学)
政治
人口
性别研究
集体认同
人口经济学
地理
人口学
政治学
人类学
物理
气象学
经济
考古
声学
法学
出处
期刊:Ethnography
[SAGE Publishing]
日期:2010-03-01
卷期号:11 (1): 45-67
被引量:25
标识
DOI:10.1177/1466138109346988
摘要
■ The public identity of a neighborhood does not always reflect its demographic composition. Some groups sustain their collective visibility as they experience demographic decline. Oakwood, a neighborhood in Los Angeles where African Americans once made up the largest segment of the population, is still known as the ‘black section of Venice’ despite the fact that Latinos have outnumbered African Americans since 1980 and whites have outnumbered them since 1990. Historical and ethnographic research illuminates the divergent processes through which African Americans and Latinos became associated with Oakwood, established qualitatively distinct ties to the area, and maintained differing degrees of influence over its local culture. African Americans’ social institutions, political organizations, visible patterns of public interaction, and periodic celebrations and commemorations enabled them to sustain their claim to the neighborhood, while Latino immigrants’ marginal citizenship status, avoidance of public spaces, and affiliation with other places prevented them from attaining collective visibility.
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