The Heterogeneous Isthmus: Transnationalism and Cultural Differentiation in Panama |
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Authors: | THOMAS J. SIGLER KALI‐AHSET AMEN K. ANGELIQUE DWYER |
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Affiliation: | 1. The University of Queensland, Australia;2. Emory University, USA;3. Gustavus Adolphus College, USA |
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Abstract: | This article addresses understandings of race and ethnicity within Latin American research by examining and arguing for an increasingly transnational interpretation of identity through an analytical engagement with the changing politics of difference in Panama. Applying historiographical and ethnographic approaches, we interrogate ethno‐racial differentiation from a transnational perspective, concluding that dominant national discourses on identity in Panama have shifted in response to transnational alliances and pressures, and that a monolithic nationalism driven by the narrative of panameñismo (a national political discourse in Panama predicated upon the concept of a monolithic and singular Panamanian culture) has given way to an ethno‐racial climate in which the politics of identity and representation are approached more pluralistically and arguably more equitably. |
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Keywords: | central America ethnicity identity politics Panama race |
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