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  • 3/25/2025
Who is considered Hispanic? What does the word even mean?

Behind the myth of the "Hispanic vote" is the disputed idea of Hispanic identity...
Transcript
00:00Black, white, hispanic, the hispanic community.
00:06Happy Hispanic Heritage Month.
00:30There's not one unique quality that means that a person identifies as hispanic.
00:41At first, hispanic was a term that was used irrespective of race.
00:47It was understood to be an ethnic marker that whitewashed ethnic and racial differences
00:57by privileging a spanish heritage as opposed to an afro-diasporic heritage or an indigenous
01:06heritage.
01:27To categorize people, there's always going to be
01:33overlap or there's always going to be imperfections.
01:36And one of the things that I think hispanic has always had is
01:47an ambiguity about what it actually means.
02:02Hispanic was a term that was meant to include people who had a cultural connection to Spain
02:18and Spanish colonization.
02:19It was useful to people from Latin America who were at the time residing in the United States
02:28to combine some of their resources, some of their interests.
02:33That's a way of addressing some of the social and economic inequalities that were the product of
02:41systemic racism, the exploitation of labor practices, lack of housing, etc.
02:48That erased the experiences of racialized Latino communities,
02:56so afro-diasporic and indigenous peoples.
02:59And so in the 80s and 90s and today, Latino became a term that was more prominent.
03:08So today you see about 50 percent of people in the United States who prefer
03:15Hispanic and about 50 percent who prefer Latino.
03:45Rosalia is Spanish, so she could be Hispanic, but she's not Latina because she doesn't have
04:00the experience, the cultural experience of being from Latin America.
04:05She doesn't have the experience of institutional racism, structural racism that so many Latinx
04:13and other people of color experience.
04:16If you are white, then your ancestry is imagined to be European.
04:24OK, but if you are Hispanic, then that's indicating that your ancestry comes from
04:32the Spanish-speaking world through Spanish colonization.
04:35Spanish people are not Latino in the sense that Latino refers to Latin American ancestry
04:47and origins and experience.
04:51They are European.
04:52They are Spanish.
04:53For most people who come from Latin America, their first form of identification is their
04:59nation of origin.
05:00Now, with the convergence of Latinx activism, Black Lives Matter, decolonial activism and
05:16practice, we're seeing a more complex and nuanced conversation about how power affects
05:24racialized bodies.