Pocho(feminine:pocha) is a pejorative slang term inMexican Spanishthat refers to Americans of Mexican descent.
Definition
editThe term originally referred to fruit that was spoiled or rotten, as well as to plants and individuals that appeared to be in poor health.[1]
Earl Shorris,an American writer and critic, definedpochosas Americans of Mexican descent "who [had] traded [their] language and culture for the illusory blandishments of life in the United States". He further observed that they were "doubly-marginalized": denied equal treatment by their birth country and regarded as inferior by their ancestral nation.[2]
Thepocholives on the cultural and racial line... utterly unprotected, [and] despised on every side: too Mexican for the Anglos and tooagringado(assimilated into America) for the Mexicans.[3]
In addition to Americans of Mexican descent,pochois also used colloquially in Mexico in reference to Mexicans who have emigrated and are perceived to have excessively adopted the customs of their adopted countries.[1]In both uses, lack of fluency in the Spanish language is considered characteristic ofpochos.[4][5]
Identifiable traits of this lack of fluency include reliance oncode-switching,English loanwords, and generally speaking Spanish in the manner stereotypically associated with foreigners. According toEl Heraldo de Chihuahua ,pochosare looked upon in Mexico "with a mixture of curiosity and contempt".[6]Rodolfo de la Garza,an American political scientist, said that when he requested a job interview from the Mexican government in 1971, he was denied by officials who told him that he "was a traitor to Mexico and... not really a Mexican".[3]
Historically, Mexican-bornpochoswho had become naturalized American citizens were viewed in Mexico as "collaborators with the enemy". The American novelistRichard Rodriguezrecalled that when his father applied for American citizenship, he kept it a secret from his friends. "American citizenship would have seemed a betrayal of Mexico, a sin against memory", Rodriguez said.[3]
History
editThe termpochoin reference to diaspora Mexicans and their children began to be popularized in the 1940s. Increased use of the term reflected widespread disdain for this group in Mexico.[7]For much of the 20th century, the country'ssustained economic prosperityand engagement withthird-worldismdrove a mood of national self-confidence that limited interaction with American politics and culture. At the same time, concern over official scrutiny from the United States discouraged the Mexican government from closer involvement with matters relating to its diaspora community and their children. Mexicans in the United States, as a result, were largely politically disenfranchised from their homeland.[8]
Intellectuals and linguistic conservatives in Mexico strongly opposed the Spanish usage associated withpochos;they organized a week-long event in August 1944 to discourage Mexicans from employingpochismos.[9]Nevertheless, by 1946pochismos,particularly in writings about baseball, were increasingly used by newspapers such asExcélsiorin Mexico andLa Opiniónin Los Angeles.[10]United States Border Patrolagents were also provided with vocabulary lists that includedpochismosbecause they "are often used on the Mexican border and the officer will get better results if he understands".[9]
Legacy and criticism
editIn an essay published inEl Nuevo Solin 2014, the journalist Nancy Oy recalled first hearing the wordpochaused in reference to her by her grandmother. It was not until she attended junior high school that she learned the significance of the term, whereupon she said she felt humiliated at being mocked by her own family:[11]
The connotation of that wordpochosounded negative to me. That word makes one feel as if they have no identity of their own because one does not know how to identify themselves: whether as American or Mexican.[11]
Andres Gallegos, in a 2018 essay forBorderzine,described the experience of being labeledpochoas that of "juggling identities". When he heard himself described as such by his Mexican friends, he understood it as signifying that he was "not Mexican enough".[12]
An opinion piece published in 2016 by theWashington Postblamednativist policiesfor "creating generations of non-Spanish speaking Latinos".[13]
In 2023, Mexican social media users labeled theregional Mexicanband,Yahritza y su Esencia,aspochosin response to an interview they gave wherein they stated their dislike of Mexican food.[14]
See also
editReferences
editCitations
edit- ^abAnonymous 2024.
- ^Shain 1999,pp. 677–678.
- ^abcShain 1999,p. 678.
- ^"pocho, -a".Diccionario de americanismos(in Spanish).Association of Academies of the Spanish Language.2010.Archivedfrom the original on September 25, 2024.RetrievedSeptember 25,2024.
- ^"pocho".Diccionario del español de México(in Spanish).El Colegio de México.Archivedfrom the original on September 25, 2024.RetrievedSeptember 25,2024.
- ^Chávez, Brenda (May 11, 2024)."Pochos y chicanos: ¿Cuáles son las diferencias entre estos dos términos?"[Pochos and Chicanos: What are the Differences Between these Two Terms?].El Heraldo de Chihuahua(in Spanish).Archivedfrom the original on September 25, 2024.RetrievedSeptember 25,2024.
- ^Shain 1999,p. 677.
- ^Shain 1999,p. 679.
- ^abWilson 1946,p. 345.
- ^Wilson 1946,p. 346.
- ^abOy 2014.
- ^Gallegos, Andres (January 7, 2018)."Mexicano, Chicano, or Pocho. Who am I?".Borderzine.Archivedfrom the original on September 25, 2024.RetrievedSeptember 25,2024.
- ^Ramos, Kristian (May 13, 2016)."Extremely personal: Pocho".Washington Post.Archivedfrom the original on September 25, 2024.RetrievedSeptember 25,2024.
- ^Barrera, Brenda (August 3, 2023)."Llaman a los integrantes de Yahritza y Su Esencia" pochos ": ¿qué significa este adjetivo?"[Members of Yahritza y Su Esencia called "pochos": What does this adjective mean?].El Sol de México(in Spanish).Organización Editorial Mexicana.Archivedfrom the original on September 25, 2024.RetrievedSeptember 25,2024.
Sources
edit- Anonymous (2024)."pocho, cha".Diccionario de la lengua española(in Spanish).Royal Spanish Academy.Archivedfrom the original on September 25, 2024.RetrievedSeptember 25,2024.
- Oy, Nancy (March 16, 2014)."Todo cambia al ser pocha"[Everything Changes When One is Pocha].El Nuevo Sol(in Spanish). Archived fromthe originalon September 25, 2024.RetrievedSeptember 25,2024.
- Shain, Yossi (Winter 1999). "The Mexican-American Diaspora's Impact on Mexico".Political Science Quarterly.114(4): 661–691.doi:10.2307/2657788.JSTOR2657788.
- Wilson, William E. (October 1946). "A Note on 'Pochismo'".The Modern Language Journal.30(6): 345–346.JSTOR319437.