Reconnecting Alaska: Mexican Movements and the Last Frontier

This paper discusses the initial findings of on-going research with Mexican migrants and immigrants to Alaska. The paper outlines the historical and on-going connections between Alaska and Mexico and explores how and why those connections have been obscured or ignored. Powerful imaginaries are assoc...

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Main Author: Sara V. Komarnisky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2012-12-01
Series:Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jef.ee/index.php/journal/article/view/110
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author Sara V. Komarnisky
author_facet Sara V. Komarnisky
author_sort Sara V. Komarnisky
collection DOAJ
description This paper discusses the initial findings of on-going research with Mexican migrants and immigrants to Alaska. The paper outlines the historical and on-going connections between Alaska and Mexico and explores how and why those connections have been obscured or ignored. Powerful imaginaries are associated with places: Alaska, and 'the north' more generally, and Latin America, and Mexico specifically. My research shows how interesting things happen when they are brought together through movement. People from Acuitzio del Canje, Michoacán began travelling to Alaska (Anchorage, and elsewhere) to work in the 1950s, and movement between Mexico and Alaska has continued across generations since then. Today, many Acuitzences who live in Anchorage maintain a close relationship with friends and family members in Acuitzio, and travel back and forth regularly. However, this movement is obscured by ideological work that makes Alaska seem separate, isolated, wild, and a place where Mexicans are not imagined to be. Mexican movements into Alaska over time disrupt this vision, showing how Alaska is connected to multiple other geographies, and making the US-Mexico border a salient reference point in everyday life in Anchorage. When the South moves into the North, it can make us think about both 'Alaska' and 'Mexico' in different ways. When the US-Mexico border is relocated to Anchorage, if only for a moment, it can elicit a reaction of humour or surprise. Why is that? And what does this have to do with how people actually live in an interconnected place?
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spelling doaj-art-b9d6a09fe4474b2f84e015bf9bcdcf842025-02-02T06:19:20ZengSciendoJournal of Ethnology and Folkloristics1736-65182228-09872012-12-016110712278Reconnecting Alaska: Mexican Movements and the Last FrontierSara V. Komarnisky0University of British ColumbiaThis paper discusses the initial findings of on-going research with Mexican migrants and immigrants to Alaska. The paper outlines the historical and on-going connections between Alaska and Mexico and explores how and why those connections have been obscured or ignored. Powerful imaginaries are associated with places: Alaska, and 'the north' more generally, and Latin America, and Mexico specifically. My research shows how interesting things happen when they are brought together through movement. People from Acuitzio del Canje, Michoacán began travelling to Alaska (Anchorage, and elsewhere) to work in the 1950s, and movement between Mexico and Alaska has continued across generations since then. Today, many Acuitzences who live in Anchorage maintain a close relationship with friends and family members in Acuitzio, and travel back and forth regularly. However, this movement is obscured by ideological work that makes Alaska seem separate, isolated, wild, and a place where Mexicans are not imagined to be. Mexican movements into Alaska over time disrupt this vision, showing how Alaska is connected to multiple other geographies, and making the US-Mexico border a salient reference point in everyday life in Anchorage. When the South moves into the North, it can make us think about both 'Alaska' and 'Mexico' in different ways. When the US-Mexico border is relocated to Anchorage, if only for a moment, it can elicit a reaction of humour or surprise. Why is that? And what does this have to do with how people actually live in an interconnected place?https://www.jef.ee/index.php/journal/article/view/110AlaskaMexicotransnationalismplace-makingbelonging
spellingShingle Sara V. Komarnisky
Reconnecting Alaska: Mexican Movements and the Last Frontier
Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics
Alaska
Mexico
transnationalism
place-making
belonging
title Reconnecting Alaska: Mexican Movements and the Last Frontier
title_full Reconnecting Alaska: Mexican Movements and the Last Frontier
title_fullStr Reconnecting Alaska: Mexican Movements and the Last Frontier
title_full_unstemmed Reconnecting Alaska: Mexican Movements and the Last Frontier
title_short Reconnecting Alaska: Mexican Movements and the Last Frontier
title_sort reconnecting alaska mexican movements and the last frontier
topic Alaska
Mexico
transnationalism
place-making
belonging
url https://www.jef.ee/index.php/journal/article/view/110
work_keys_str_mv AT saravkomarnisky reconnectingalaskamexicanmovementsandthelastfrontier