How is the Puerto Rican experience similar to that of the other Latin American immigrants to the U.S.? The experiences in the video portraying Puerto Ricans had several similarities to that of other Latin Americans immigrating to the U.S. The interviewers had similar stories as to either coming to the US with their parents or by their own choice. The one thing the two groups have in common is the experience of a language-barrier.…
Puerto Rican Passages provides a comprehensive overview about Puerto Rico, and the Puerto Rican population in the United States, specifically Connecticut. It touches upon issues such as the history of Puerto Rico, immigration, politics and economy, and social and cultural issues concerning Puerto Ricans. The documentary aims at capturing the reasons for the large number of Puerto Rican population in Connecticut, and how their community is often misperceived.…
In Lorena Garcia’s book Respect yourself, Protect Yourself the situation of school sexual education is brought up with how it’s a bias system that lacks in teaching students proper sexual education. The system as Hochschild puts it “Research on sex education has revealed that sex education policies are informed by national and local struggles over the meaning and consequences of gender, race, class, and sexual categories” (Hochschild, 1994). Hochschild quote is supported throughout this book by the experiences that the young Latina women face during high school sex education. Non-stop examples how the system is flawed with problems of heteronormative, class-based notions of sexuality, and racism.…
There are many countries in the Carribean. One of them is Puerto Rico. It is located between the Carribean Sea and the North Atlantic Ocean. In addition Puerto Rico is also to the east of the dominican Republic, with a longitude and lattitude of 18° 15" N and 66° 30" W. Puerto Rico is a tremendously small country, being at aproximately 100 miles long and 35 miles wide. Puerto Rico’s land is 60% mountainous. Its main mountain range the Cordillera Central or the Central Mountains Range, which extends 50 miles through the interior of the island between Manatí and La Plata rivers. Puerto Rico has many types of soil. In fact, it has humid coastal plains, semiarid coastal plains, humid uplands, semiarid uplands and humid upland valleys. Though, soils…
What is the history of Puerto Rico’s relationship to the United States post-1898? How has the legal-sovereignty status of Puerto Rico evolved since then and what is the current legal-sovereignty status?…
Family is the foundation of the Puerto Rican social structure. ”Familismo” is a Puerto Rican word meaning close family connections, stressing the well-being of the family, as opposed to cultures which place a greater emphasis on friends and same-age peers as an integral part of the social structure. Puerto Rican family complex is extensive; it is based on the Spanish system of compadrazgo in which many members—not just parents and siblings—are considered to be part of the immediate family. Thus los abuelos(grandparents) and los tios y las tias (uncles and aunts) and even los primos y las primas (cousins) are considered extremely close relatives in the Puerto Rican family structure. Close friends often refer to each other as compadre y…
Although Puerto Ricans are made up of three peoples: Spanish, African, and Taíno, the black history of Puerto Rico is often made light of. Afro-Latino is a term coined to identify people from Latin America who have traceable African ancestry. To many, the term is oxymoronic and often problematic in the United States, where the need for racial and social classification needs to be refined to; Black, White, Hispanic, Native-American, Asian. “Afro-” as a prefix for something Latin is usually associated with sociological elements such as Afro-Brazilian, Afro-Cuban All Stars, or Afro-Latin studies, but what does it really mean to be Afro-Latino? Outside of cultural concepts and sociological studies, Afro-Latino is a term not often used for self-identification.…
which is a predominantly Hispanic area of the city. I myself am also a Roman…
In the memoir When I was Puerto Rican by Esmeralda Santiago, the author recounts her childhood. Also referred to as "Negi," Esmeralda shares the various stages of her upbringing throughout Puerto Rico's various cities, including Macún and Santurce. After dealing with several uprooting experiences, multiple schools, and even more challenging periods of adjustment, Negi is ultimately uprooted once more. After several years without commitment, Negi's mother Ramona decides to leave Esmeralda's father and immigrate to New York. Immigration has a tremendous effect on Esmeralda. Negi experienced similar effects when she was moved to different cities throughout Puerto Rico, although on a much smaller scale. For example, when Negi’s family relocates…
Puerto Rico is located between the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. Puerto Rico is a self-governing commonwealth associated with the United States. All citizens born in Puerto Rico are considered US Citizens. The main language is Spanish and English, however, many other languages are spoken there.…
Puerto Rico is a mountainous tropical island directly in the path of trade winds. These tropical conditions account for its tropical rain forest and tropical wet and dry climates. There is little difference from season to season in the energy received by the sun, and being near the equator the length of the day remains fairly constant throughout the year.…
I am Puerto Rican, or, as my family constantly reminds me, "boriqua". As a result, I grew up learning two languages; English and Spanish. However, ever since I have attended school I have lost much of my Spanish. Unlike the other kids who cried and clung to their moms, I was very enthusiastic about starting school. I think the enthusiasm came from my parent's encouragement to learn, as well as their assurance that they'd be there at the end of the day to pick me up and take me back home.…
Puerto Rico has a unique culture, which significantly is seen in the food, life style, music, and military.…
The definition of identity has been an issue that bring worries to people who feel they are in between two or more cultures and still don’t know where they belong. The article “Who are we? Identities of Stateside and Island Boricuas” was written by Ariana Green in the San Juan City Magazine on 2005. As the title of the article indicates, there is an issue between the identities on both of these groups, about who feels more Puerto Rican. This has been a controversial topic since a long time ago, especially involving the “Nuyorican’s” from the time when the Puerto Rican diaspora started in New York. The real question involving this article is how they make both of these cultures into a more perfect union, as Ariana Green says.…
Growing Up Latina in America (Cultural Differences as a Basis for Diverging Ideals of Physical Beauty)…