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Latino Assimilation, Divided Loyalties and the World Cup
Soccer and Society (2014)
  • Brandon Valeriano, Ph.D, Seton Hall University
Abstract
The tendency for Latinos in the USA to support Mexican (or other national) soccer teams is taken as a problematic signal that Latinos are not assimilating into mainstream US society. The question of cultural assimilation and identity is critical to the ongoing debate regarding immigration and the influx of Latinos in the USA. Many argue that the Latino population differs from past immigrant populations because the new group is not assimilating into mainstream US society and sports structures. This paper challenges the thesis that the support of a person’s favoured national team can measure cultural assimilation and loyalty to the USA as overly simplistic and as an example of nativism. Support of national soccer teams cannot be used as a reliable indicator for cultural assimilation. An important query left out of the discussion is the level of US incorporation of Latinos into US civil society; after all, assimilation is not a one-way street. It is less the case that Latinos in the USA have divided loyalties and more likely that they are underrepresented and ignored by US institutions. Soccer is a possible pathway towards assimilation and incorporation if taken seriously by the dominant structural organizations.
Disciplines
Publication Date
2014
DOI
10.1080/14660970.2013.828599
Citation Information
Brandon Valeriano. "Latino Assimilation, Divided Loyalties and the World Cup" Soccer and Society Vol. 15 Iss. 3 (2014) p. 291 - 313 ISSN: 1743-9590
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/brandon-valeriano/25/