Gangs Chicanas Women Gender Studies Race Yakima Valley, Washington State Adolescents Ethnography
This is an ethnographic project designed to explore the lives, needs, and struggles of three Chicana gang members in the Lower Yakima Valley in Washington. The intersections of race, class, and gender are discussed and viewed through the narratives of these young women. The objective was to explore whether the gang is an outlet for resistance to social structures and traditional women’s roles. Though each of these Chicanas were in different stages in their development, it is nevertheless clear that each experienced the gang as a “safe agency” in which they were free to resist traditional roles and incorporate nontraditional roles while continuing to struggle for acceptance in terms of mainstream values.
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Details
Title
Chicana Gang Members: Resistance to Traditional Women's Roles
Creators
Patricia Acevedo (Author)
Contributors
Steven R Burkett (Other) - Washington State University, Graduate School
Publication Details
WSU McNair Journal, pp.1-7
Academic Unit
McNair Journal
Publisher
Washington State University. Graduate School. McNair Program.
Identifiers
99900502599601842
Copyright
In copyright ; openAccess ; http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ; http://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/OpenAccess