Friday, May 24, 2019

Mexican and american mexican

Mexican American forms nonpareil of the most oldest and largest of ethnic communities living in USA. The overwhelming majority of Mexican Americans populate in four southern US states, although many a(prenominal) of them are spread also in upper northern areas. Spanish Mexicans were among the first mint to explore and inhabit USA, tied(p) before arrival of western settlers. Later, as USA expanded its territories afterwards the Mexican war of 1846, Texas was annexed from Mexico and thousands of Mexicans automatically found themselves as part of United States, forced to assimilate themselves with a distinct culture.The assimilation of Mexicans has been a very slow and comparatively unaccomplished process and ethnic Mexicans have always organize a distinguished niche for them, continuing in their traditional docile and peaceful outlook that stands at sharp contrast with materialist and high paced American life historystyle. This motif analyzes the favorable, political and ec onomic factor that have guided the relation between Americans and Mexican AmericansHistory of Mexican American RelationSpanish explorers had conquered Mexico by sixteenth century and they used Mexican territories as base to continue their exploration of USA. As the Spanish empire crumbled, Mexico struggled to get its independence, which it achieved in 1826. However, Mexican independence was non a sanguine affair by all accounts and there were numerous issues of internal discord, the chief one them being the problem of Texas. Mexico had allowed American settlers to inhabit the needy and desolate landscapes of its northern states, bordering with USA that included, Texas and California in particular.However, the number of American settlers increased dramatically in these areas, and it reached to the proportion that Americans began to dominate the political and economic life of these areas. The dominance of Americans started episodes of conflict between the two people as Americans wou ld not accept the hierarchical, state centric and rather outdated political and companionable nonplus of Mexican people and this caused frequent incidents of friction among them and Mexican authorities. The American settlers of northern Mexican border areas definitely perceived that their future lay with a furthermost more(prenominal) prosperous, secure and economically sound USA than a comparatively regressive and stagnant Mexico. Meanwhile US senators also perceived the economic and strategic importance of these northern bordering states.The troubles in these areas rapidly snowballed into a major problem when Texas seceded from Mexico in 1836, a decision that Mexico did not recognize. As the mutual affinity of twain Texas and US was to each other, USA formally annexed Texas and as result Mexico entered in a two years war with USA. The results of war were disastrous for Mexico and it lost more than one third of its territories to USA at the accordance of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Ho wever, the effects of the war were not limited to mere annexation of territories but also of Mexican people living in this huge geographical area who overnight became subjects of USA.The relations among Americans/Yankees and Mexicans were always strained due to superior attitude of Anglo-Americans that had always made them pay with certain arrogance towards Mexicans. In this context, the results of war were more humiliating, and the loss of national land created a lasting perception of injustice and wrong that cleaveed with American Mexicans for decades, and to an goal even today.Alienation of Mexican AmericansOf all the major ethnic groups living in USA, the Mexican American community is unique in several respects. in spite of their living in a predominantly American society, they have been able to preserve their value system, their culture and tradition, their family structure and their belief, a fact that has puzzled many social scientists. Although the likeliest explanation of this phenomena relates to the fact that most of the Mexican-American and immaturely arrived Mexican immigrants continued to settle in southern states of USA, bordering with Mexico, providing a sense of continuousness and native familiarity that helped them to stay in their niches.However, this is only partially true and doesnt throw full light upon the causes. A major reason of separate and distinguished Mexican individuation has been long lasting grievances of many Mexicans on account of their forced assimilation in USA and subsequent highhandedness of Americans towards Mexicans after the war years. The American superiority in terms of education and affluence when contrasted with general level of impoverishment, illiteracy, and ignorance of early Mexican Americans definitely presented a great divide between two people with a firm notion that any assimilation among them would be impossible.This stereotype further caused Mexican to recede in their self formed shell, and minimize their interaction with one of most rapidly changing and advancing world, of which they had become an unwilling part. Even the fact they were granted all the rights as any other American citizen and no discrimination, at theoretical and ideological level was practiced with them, it did not help in their assimilation in an completely alien and foreign political and social system. As a matter of fact, the very decisions of American government allowing complete political and religious freedom to Mexican population at the time of Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo allowed Mexican people to preserve their cultural and traditional identity in the great cultural potboiler called USA.However, the ground political, social and economic realities worked to gradually dilute the barriers that Mexican American had created around them. Slowly many of them started to interact with the mainstream society as they realized the necessity of assimilation in order to exist in peck that had changed irrevocably. Most of the Mexican Americans fanned out, taking participation in the world around them, though maintaining their cultural roots intact. Those with deeper sense of wrong and who found new system unacceptable, took violent methods of protests while some who completely failed to get assimilated continued to live isolated lives.Although some dissatisfied Mexicans tried to express their anger through and through means of violence, in general the Mexicans rejected violence as expression tool, for they realized that through peaceful course alone they could ensure the survival in a largely Anglo USA. As the Mexicans realized their future destiny to be intertwined with USA and their new status as Mexican Americans, they also gradually pass judgment the new political and social system.Mexican Americans formed their own political parties, elected representatives in the democratic processes and for a time become influential political force in the southern states, owing to their numerical sup eriority. The Mexican political leaders tried to protect the rights and privileges of their people to the best extent possible for them, except the fact that among themselves there were frequent instances of both political and economic exploitation.However, the influence of Mexican politics lasted only as long as they could held to their numerical superiority. As the southern states were connected to rest of the country through extensive system of railways by 1880s, the inflow of North Americans (Yankees) reached steadily, and soon they outnumbered the native Mexicans to end their political and even cultural influence, gradually absorbing them in the Yankee mainstream. As the general trend showed in perspective, Mexicans Americans were successful in preserving their cultural roots and identity in all those places where they enjoyed numerical superiority, such as Southern Arizona, New Mexico and South Texas. In other places, where they were outnumbered, they become American Mexicans from Mexican Americans.The composition of Mexican Americans changed after the heavy immigration of Mexicans in USA in early 20th century, when USA offered much better employment opportunities. For a considerable time, the immigrants identified themselves that as workers in an alien land, while culturally mingling with their own countrymen. But since 1960s Mexican community has seen wave of cultural liberation and social assimilation and integration in the mainstream American system.ReferenceDavid J. Weber. 1973. Foreigners in Their Native Land Historical Roots of the Mexican Americans. University of New Mexico Press, 1973.Leo Grebler, Joan W. Moore, Ralph C. Guzman, et al., 1970. The Mexican-American People The Nations arcsecond Largest Minority . New York, p. 10.The Mexican-American People A Review Symposium, Social Science Quarterly 52, no. 1 ( June 1971) 8-38,El Grito. 1968. The Anthropology and Sociology of Mexican-Americans The Distortion of Mexican-American History, 2, no. 1 (1968)The Anthropology and Sociology of Mexican-Americans The Distortion of Mexican-American History, El Grito 2, no. 1 (1968)

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