Non-Fiction Books:

Language Brokers

Children of Immigrants Translating Inequality and Belonging for Their Families
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$88.00
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  • 13-20 August using International Courier

Description

How successfully families in the U.S. navigate various institutional contexts frequently relies on a parent's ability to be continuously available for and capable of supporting their children. But what happens when one or both parents are immigrants who have limited English proficiency? This us the case for two-thirds of immigrant families in the U.S., and more often than not the children in these families must support their parents by acting as "language brokers," or translators, often in high-stakes situations. In Language Brokers, Hyeyoung Kwon shines a light on these lived realities for working-class Mexican- and Korean-American youth in Southern California. Focusing especially on healthcare and criminal justice contexts, Kwon shows that the work of translating is about much more than just words. These children learn early about the harsh financial realities their parents face. They are burdened with portraying their parents, not as inassimilable and undeserving free riders of social welfare, but as "normal" Americans who deserve full citizenship rights. Kwon's stirring account prove that, as long as immigrants' values and behaviors are blamed for what are actually structural problems, children of immigrants will have to perform Americanness to cultivate a sense of belonging.

Author Biography:

Hyeyoung Kwon is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Indiana University, Bloomington.
Release date NZ
August 6th, 2024
Author
Audience
  • Professional & Vocational
Pages
256
ISBN-13
9781503639461
Product ID
37983872

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