Chicano Gang Members in Recovery: The Public Talk of Negotiating Chicano Masculinities
2013; Oxford University Press; Volume: 60; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1525/sp.2013.60.4.476
ISSN1533-8533
AutoresEdward Orozco Flores, Pierrette Hondagneu‐Sotelo,
Tópico(s)Racial and Ethnic Identity Research
ResumoAbstract Using ethnographic data from Los Angeles, this article examines the ritualized forms of verbal communication used in two Chicano gang recovery programs, Homeboy Industries and Victory Outreach. These two distinctive programs facilitate recovery from gangs through contrasting models of communication anchored in religion and therapeutic rehabilitation. In recovery, ritualized verbal displays subordinate gang masculinity and elevate conventional notions of masculinity. Former gang members use sermons, group therapy, 12-step programs, and personal testimonials to articulate hegemonic ideals of masculinity, such as responsible fatherhood. A critical component of these gang rehabilitation programs rearticulates the meanings of Chicano masculinity to include abstaining from drug use, providing for family members, and engaging in nurturing behavior. Through these verbal rituals, reformed gang masculinity is repositioned as dominant, desirable, and accessible to marginalized Chicano men with past gang affiliations and addictions. sp.2013.60.4.476_Flores 5476165543001
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