"We ARE America!" cultural politics and Chicano movement legacies in the work of Los Tigres del Norte and El Vez
- Publication Type:
- Thesis
- Issue Date:
- 2007
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The musical production of Los Tigres del Norte and El Vez illustrates Mexican
and Chicano/a traditions of using popular music as an alternative way of narrating
Mexican immigrant, Chicano/a and Mexican American community life in the
U.S.A. These musicians grapple with the ways in which a dominant U.S. national
discourse has historically subordinated Mexican immigrant and Chicano/a
communities. Through their lyrics these musicians propose—albeit in different
ways—a progressive cultural politics that underscores the importance of equality
and anti-discrimination based on ethnic, cultural, gender and class positions. This
thesis compares the work of Los Tigres and El Vez and argues that, beyond the
merely documenting and providing a narrative representation of Mexican
immigrant and Chicano/a experiences in the U.S.A., these musicians must also be
regarded as political activists, using their lyrics and musical profile to articulate
and present alternative politics on behalf of Mexican immigrants and Chicano/as
in the U.S., and in ways that work with the legacies of the Chicano Movement in
the 1960s and 1970s.
In this thesis I attend to the differences between El Vez and Los Tigres del Norte.
The musicians come from distinct musical and performance backgrounds, and
work with distinct generic musical praxes. While recognizing those differences, I
nonetheless identify five comparable axes of progressive politics in their work.
First, they counter the notion that Mexican immigrant, Chicano/a and Mexican
American communities in the U.S.A. form one homogenized group. Second, they
emphasize community building as a form of empowerment for immigrant groups
and ethnic minorities. Third, they continue the Chicano Movement fight for
human rights and equality; but rather than calling for a separate nation of Aztlán,
Los Tigres del Norte and El Vez claim a place for Mexican immigrants and
Chicano/as as viable and productive constituencies in the U.S.A. Four, though
these artists are male performers, they also deal with gendere issues and female
characters and thus do not uphold the subordinate role of women in Mexican
immigrant and Chicano/a patriarchal societies. And five, Los Tigres del Norte and
El Vez engage with notions of an “America” whose pan-ethnic and trans-national
qualities reflect the musicians’ advocacy of alliances between diverse subordinate
groups. Such engagements demonstrate that Los Tigres del Norte and El Vez
operate as political activists whose lyrics and musical profile confirm the lasting
impact of Chicano Movement activist aspirations, while also reworking those
aspirations in line with changing sociopolitical conditions.
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