Racial and Ethnic Groups: Hispanics Living in the United States
To suggest that Hispanics comprise a single ethnic group is to ignore the tremendous diversity among the different Hispanic ethnic subgroups. Depending on the heritage country, these different Hispanic groups may have very different cultures. Examining the linguistic, political, social, economic, religious, and familial conventions of these different ethnic subgroups helps highlight their similarities and differences. This paper will examine those features in four Hispanic groups: Mexican-Americans, Puerto Ricans, Cuban Americans, and Central South Americans.
Mexican-Americans are Americans of Mexican descent. Mexican-Americans are primarily Spanish speakers, though the language spoken in the home may not be Spanish. Spanish is the official language of Mexico, but it is important to realize that "the indigenous people of this nation - almost five centuries after The Conquest - still speak approximately 288 Amerindian languages" (Schmal, 2004). Catholicism is the dominant religion among Mexican-Americans, though there are substantial subgroups of Mexican-Americans that practice every major world religion. In fact, there is a thriving Jewish Mexican-American population. Likewise, Mexican-Americans are an economically diverse group. Many Mexican-Americans are in the United States illegally and are stuck in the underground economy and consigned to a very low economic status. However, there are also tremendously wealthy Mexican-Americans, who are very upwardly mobile. Socially, Mexican-Americans can vary as well. Like many immigrant groups, more recent immigrants are more likely to place emphasis on their Mexican-American status, while second and third generation Mexican-Americans are more likely to have assimilated into generic American society. All of this diversity makes it very difficult to try to explain the family conventions of Mexican-Americans, however, traditional Mexican-American families tend to have a patriarchal male figure, emphasize the importance of the male, define a family as a married heterosexual, nuclear family unit, and encourage care of elder family members. When one looks at how diverse Mexican-Americans are, it should come as no surprise that they are a politically diverse group as well. Mexican-Americans have recently been associated with the Democrats, though the Republican Party attracts Mexican-Americans because...
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