Recognising Racism and Mestizaje in Mexico
Dr Mónica Moreno Figueroa (University of Newcastle) will give the fourth seminar in the series 'Race, Ethnicity and Nation in the Hispanic World'
Mestiza is a racial category that emerges as a key component of the ideological myth of formation of the Mexican nation, namely mestizaje, during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In such a project of state formation Mexican is equivalent to Mestiza. Mestiza refers to those who represent Mexicaness and, therefore, those who are closer to the model of the ideal subjects of the Mexican Mestiza nation. Mestizaje, as this ideological framework, boosts an implied rhetoric of inclusiveness while concealing processes of exclusion and racism 'based on the idea of the inferiority of blacks and indigenous peoples and, in practice, of discrimination against them' (Wade 2001: 849). Mestiza is then seen as term both relatively 'neutral' (i.e. all Mexicans are Mestizas/os) but also as highly 'loaded' (implies possibilities of inclusion and exclusion to the national myth).
Drawing from empirical research on contemporary practices of racism and understandings of the discourse of mestizaje, this paper presents an examination of the ambiguities of Mestiza identity as an unproblematised but racialised identity. This analysis considers the limits of racial recognition in what could be considered a raceless (Goldberg 2002) context. Such setting has given way to a process of racial and racist normalization that allows Mexican people to express and be convinced by the commonly spread idea that in Mexico there is no racism because we are all 'mixed'. Mexicans do not recognise themselves as racial subjects, but as national subjects and citizens. In this scenario, recognition of racism is not preceded by the explicit claim of belonging to the specific Mestiza racial identity but a citizenship status.
