Author Topic: profe asks a Mexican  (Read 1706 times)

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Plane

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profe asks a Mexican
« on: October 01, 2006, 05:53:35 PM »









¡Ask a Mexican!'Something happens when we cross the border—we forget our sense of humor and become too literal'
By Gustavo Arellano
Thursday, September 28, 2006 - 3:00 pm
 
Illustration by Mark Dancey
Dear Readers: Folks went loco following my Sept. 7 column in which I blamed Chicano studies for spawning a generation of humorless activists and “corrupt[ing] the brains of young Mexicans with antiquated concepts like victimization, objectification and grade inflation.” Too many letters and comments from professors, activists and Zach de la Rocha to publish here, though special recognition goes to the poster at Loteriachicana.net who invited me to “decolonize” and “rehumanize” myself; to paraphrase Emma Goldman (again), I don’t want to be part of any revolution that has me speaking in jargon.

One professor thought I described her discipline perfectly:



I agree with your analysis of Chicana/o studies. Something happens when we cross the border—we forget our sense of humor and become too literal. As a professor in the field, I try to teach my students to loosen up and stop being too damn uptight. I received my initial lesson from [LA Weekly cartoonista] Lalo Alcaraz, master at being politically incorrect while furthering the causa.

Second-Generation Feminista Chicana Profesora Keepin’ It Real




On the opposite side of the 700-mile double fence is Reynaldo F. Macias, chairman of Education and Applied Linguistics at the University of California, Los Angeles and former chair of the National Association for Chicana & Chicano studies:



I enjoy your column because you often inject humor into serious topics; other times you try and don’t make the grade, but we can’t always bat a thousand. I found it curioso that that you would trash Chicana/o studies—blaming it for the social malaise and racism that has existed and still exists against Mexicans. I agree that there can be self-righteous bores in Chicana/o studies (just like in journalism) that are too serious for their own good—but that’s hardly Chicana/o studies as a whole. You need to revisit Chicana/o studies classrooms and programs to get an accurate picture of the field and the positive contributions being made by faculty and the graduates of these programs. My sense of these programs is the opposite of your inaccurate characterizations, which unfortunately reinforce the distorted and politicized right-wing and conservative views on Chicana/o studies, ethnic studies and women’s studies . . . There is hardly time for, or interest in, perpetuating victimization; but a high priority in promoting individual agency and competence.

Gracias for the kind words, profe, but I never slurred Chicano studies in the way you imply. I agree Chicano studies is valuable in examining and documenting the Mexican-American experience, but my sense of the subject is that it’s the scholastic equivalent of a group hug, where students learn mostly about past grievances caused by the ever-evil gabachos and become thoughtless ideologues (see George Orwell’s “Politics and the English Language”) who can’t see the tostada for the beaners. But maybe Chicano studies has become more Mexican—that is, libertarian instead of blindly leftist—in the three years since I finished grad school at UCLA, so tell you what, Dr. Macias: I’ll retract my charges if you use your position to stop the use of “Chicana/o,” the silliest bit of political correctness since the term “herstory.”



Why is it that when someone asks you a simple question, you reply with an essay? Just get to the point already. And if you’re trying to look smart or funny, you’re neither—you’re simply as ignorant as any other Mexican.

Grinning Gringo


Dear Gabacho: Smart questions deserve thorough answers.

Plane

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Re: profe asks a Mexican
« Reply #1 on: October 01, 2006, 06:20:23 PM »









Why do you people stink?

Zestfully White


Dear Gabacho: Same reason you don’t: hard work.



Which comes first: the low-paying, so-called jobs that Americans won’t do or the Mexicans who are willing to sleep three and four to a 10-by-12 room so that they can afford to work those jobs?

Vivo Contontos


Dear Gabacho: You’re presenting us with a Rorschach test—our answer reveals our position regarding the Mexican Question and says more about us than the actual effects of Mexicans on the economy. Whether Mexican immigrants drive down wages, improve the economy, or have no effect (or are part of a triple alliance with Islamofascists and the Chinese to take over the United States) is a topic so complicated that you can easily find an “expert” and “stats” to support any “position.” The July 9 New York Times Magazine, for instance, featured battling economic professors who fought round after round until coming to no decision. This Mexican’s take: Mexicans will continue to take the jobs Americans won’t do until Big Business pays a living wage across the board or Americans are willing to pick strawberries at the minimum wage. Don’t bet on the former; if Americans do the latter, they’re either stupid or desperate. Or Mexican.