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Diego Román; Luis Gonzalez-Quizhpe – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2024
Drawing from Critical Latinx Indigeneities, this study explored how Kichwa Saraguro families are (re)creating their Indigeneity and reclaiming their Kichwa language in rural areas of Wisconsin. Using a subset of data gathered through ethnographic work, we report on interviews with 10 members of the Saraguro community as they described the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Immigrants, Self Concept, Social Networks
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Michael Bernard-Donals – College English, 2010
The position of the excluded other, it seems to the author, is the position that has characterized Jews since antiquity: exiled from the nation and dispersed to other nations, Jewish participation in civic life has been defined, even in modernity, by its marginalization and precariousness. The Jew, in other words, provides a salient example of the…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Jews, Conflict, Citizen Participation
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Ackley, Kristina – American Indian Quarterly, 2009
The Oneidas have a history marked by land dispossession and removal from a once vast homeland. In 2009, there are three Oneida communities that share in litigation for the return of the homeland; in New York (2,000 members), at the Thames community near Southwold, Ontario (5,000 members), and in Wisconsin (15,000 members). Those hostile to the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, American Indians, Self Concept, Land Settlement