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Salsa Crossings: Dancing Latinidad in Los Angeles (Latin America Otherwise)

Author Cindy García
Publisher Duke University Press Books
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Book Details
ISBN / ASIN0822354977
ISBN-139780822354970
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank903,432
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

In Los Angeles, night after night, the city's salsa clubs become social arenas where hierarchies of gender, race, and class, and of nationality, citizenship, and belonging are enacted on and off the dance floor. In an ethnography filled with dramatic narratives, Cindy García describes how local salseras/os gain social status by performing an exoticized L.A.–style salsa that distances them from club practices associated with Mexicanness. Many Latinos in Los Angeles try to avoid "dancing like a Mexican," attempting to rid their dancing of techniques that might suggest that they are migrants, poor, working-class, Mexican, or undocumented. In L.A. salsa clubs, social belonging and mobility depend on subtleties of technique and movement. With a well-timed dance-floor exit or the lift of a properly tweezed eyebrow, a dancer signals affiliation not only with a distinctive salsa style but also with a particular conceptualization of latinidad.