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Latina Traditions Remade in America

By Lakshmi Chaudhry, TheNation.com. Posted November 17, 2007.


The crass commodification of Latina traditions and rites of passage is disintegrating the familial and communal relationships they are meant to celebrate.

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The commercial for the Saturn Vue offers a pithy indictment of our culture of bling in its slogan: "Rethink American. Rethink Excess." Ironic, perhaps, in an ad touting the virtues of a hybrid SUV, but it reflects a growing unease among us about how runaway consumption threatens to devour us whole.

Nowhere is this culture of greed run amok more conspicuously on display than on MTV's hit reality show My Super Sweet Sixteen. The series showcases all that is grotesque in status-obsessed parents today, but it also offers fair warning of the worse that is to come when their self-indulged progeny come of age. Consider 15-year-old Ava, who infamously threw a tantrum because her parents initially refused to buy her a Range Rover. If these children are our future, then the end of days is surely right around the corner.

The conspicuous displays on television are but extreme examples of a booming "coming of age" market that has marketing analysts salivating. Be it school proms, bar and bat mitzvahs or sweet sixteens, celebrating your child's (most often, your daughter's) entrance into adulthood has become big business. What was once a solemn rite of passage -- or at least a sweet moment of parental nostalgia and teenage excitement -- has turned into a spending extravaganza.

In such times, a book critiquing the commercialization of the quinceañera, a Latino tradition similar to the sweet sixteen, feels mandatory and inevitable. With a self-described mission to chronicle "how our traditions are remade in the USA, repackaged and sold back to us at a higher price," Julia Alvarez's Once Upon a Quinceañera offers the expected critique of commercialization, but she also points to the complex, contradictory and often bewildering relationships among tradition, materialism and identity.

The quinceañera is a lavish fiesta that marks a Latina girl's entry into womanhood, usually held on her fifteenth birthday. As with other such celebrations, these too have been supersized to epic proportions, with the average price tag running at $5,000 for a night of limousines, stylists, caterers and, of course, the overpriced, outsized princess dress.

The dollar amounts spent on the quinceañera are comparable to other sweet sixteen parties, but that kind of expense can represent a staggering financial burden for the average Latino family. Parents often save for years for this special night, sometimes dooming themselves to a lifetime of debt for one night of overindulgence. What can be dismissed as the cupidity of upper-middle-class wannabes on MTV looks like financial suicide for a typical working-class family in Queens.

But the extravagant quinceañera is about a lot more than keeping up with the Rodriguezes. "It's just something that comes to us from the past, that we want to give our children because it's something we never had," says unemployed carpenter Manuel Ramos in Alvarez's book, explaining his decision to spend $3,000-plus on his daughter Monica's quinceañera.

Yet there is little that is traditional or authentic about this re-created fragment of the past. The rites that mark Monica Ramos's passage into adulthood are a pastiche of elements borrowed from various traditions, old and new, a little bit Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican and even Walt Disney.

The fiesta is less about preserving an ancestral tradition than celebrating and affirming a Latino identity that simply didn't exist in the old country. The American version of the ritual was born of the quintessential immigrant desire to give the children what the parents were denied back in the home country -- in this case, an out-of-reach fantasy reserved for the daughters of the wealthy.


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Lakshmi Chaudhry is a senior editor at In These Times and a former senior editor of AlterNet.

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So where does "American culture" stop & parenting begin?
Posted by: war_on_tara on Nov 17, 2007 4:41 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AlterNet and The Nation are always advising educated, liberal, white parents, in effect, don't let your kids do X, Y or Z so they won't grow up so materialistic.

It's hard to see how American culture can be fully to blame for a certain ersatz custom, when the vast majority of Americans are totally unaware of the custom. Is the point of the story to make us white liberals feel guilty about the quinceanera? What are we supposed to do about it? I don't even know what to do about the typical American wedding.

It's understandable to worry about the well-being of immigrants here, but I was mystified by the mention of the cosmetic surgery boom among those veiled women in Iran - no doubt that's also the fault of Americans, somehow, but do you suppose Bush bombing the place will make that better, or worse? :-(

MTV is on premium cable where I live, and would mean an expense of at least $75 a month for an "unemployed carpenter" or anyone else.

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Pop or progressive critique?
Posted by: laoma on Nov 17, 2007 8:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is interesting that the author can't get beyond the veil of multi-cultural pop culture. Where is the critique of the marketing of women? Where is the feminist/humanist analysis against this tradition, Latina or not, as much as against the high society debutante balls? 'Minority' communities are just as likely or more so to have severe anti-woman/anti-humanist traditions and they should be pointed out in a progressive/ critical forum. Kowtowing to PC notions of the capitalist/materialist corruption of minority traditions as if they were 'sancrosanct' serves only to preserve not change those traditions.

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» RE: Heritage Posted by: MeridaLady
I kind of like the idea of having the Quinceanera around
Posted by: logansafi on Nov 17, 2007 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most anglos haven't given a thought to quinceaneras, but the problem with how they are done by many is one of proportionality.

But this is a problem with birthdays, too, but who would critique the birthday party concept at all? Or, how about weddings? Know people who spend too damn much on both these formal events?

The quinceanera celebrates the fact that a young girl has become a woman, and what's more does it at Age 15. Anglo society thinks that women should not really be sexually active at all, and definitely not to have kids until women are when...? Age 100?

The quincianera is not Puritan enough for current, capitalist-consumerist driven Anglo society. It rubs many Anglos the wrong way, in fact. They don't like that Age 15 thing at all.

Many Latinos, though, think that the way to celebrate this event is to be absolutely materialisticly lavish about it. Keep the ceremony, but don't break the pocketbook when you do. It is quite nice to let daughters have their moment of Glory if they in fact, wish to do so?

Girls, you are something special at Age 15. Why not celebrate it in a big way? It would be nice if Anglos had this custom, too. The quinceanera is certainly better than high school cheerleading and football team stuff.

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age 15 as a "woman" a teen motherhood...
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Nov 17, 2007 9:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
okay, hmmmm.
wonder if there is a real connection between age 15 as a "woman" a teen motherhood?

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Look on the bright side . . .
Posted by: MAD on Nov 17, 2007 10:40 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Families that put themselves into debt for life throwing such misguided fetes are actually doing us a favor. They inject money into the economy while (hopefully) setting their stupid, spoiled little princess down the ignominious path of the slave laborer.

When the economy really crashes and mommy and daddy are sent packing from their formerly high paying jobs, they'll be unable to send their moronic little princess to college and she'll end up raking leaves in my yard. Tant mieux pour moi!

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This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.
Most of the comments here remind me of Howard Stern talking about Selena
Posted by: logansafi on Nov 17, 2007 5:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This was not all that great an article to begin with, but many of the comments are much worse.

I have seen many Quinceaneras in South Texas, and it has nothing to do with family members getting drunk. Instead of acting like Howard Stern did when Selena died, maybe more Anglos need to think more about their covert racial prejudices some before writing down BS?

The celebration of the Quinceanera is one of the nicer customs around and not something to be dissed thoughtlessly.

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» RE: Right on logansafi Posted by: MeridaLady
» Howard Stern talk Posted by: YogiBear
Mike Males
Posted by: mmales on Nov 17, 2007 10:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please stop running crap like this. Not only does the author indulge demeaning stereotypes of young people, but rotten journalism relying on a few sensational incidents and lots of vitriolic rhetoric like Fox News. No one is holding a gun at anyone's head to force them to forsake traditions or spend a lot of money, and the author's harsh judgments about those who do have nothing to do with progressive, alternative media. Leave the culture-war junk to mainstream fluff outlets.

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it goes beyond class
Posted by: sophiej on Nov 19, 2007 7:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ms. Chaudry writes:
"The American version of the ritual was born of the quintessential immigrant desire to give the children what the parents were denied back in the home country -- in this case, an out-of-reach fantasy reserved for the daughters of the wealthy."
That may have been true once, but no longer. My neighbors in a small Mexican fishing village had a quinceañera for their daughter back in the early '90s with all their friends and relatives contributing the food, drink, decorations, music -- or contributing money to pay for the party. A friend who lived in Mexico City told me about hearing a thank-you list on a local radio station with credits for all the "godparents" who had contributed to a quinceañera, right down to the "godmother of paper napkins."
Maybe it's not realistic for poor families, but it's a lot of fun and a community effort.

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view from mexico...
Posted by: sbmckean on Nov 20, 2007 12:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a U.S. citizen living in Mexico, I've seen the quinciniera tradition here and have been surprised at how lavish some of the celebrations are, even for girls whose families don't have many financial resources, although not all of the parties are on a grand scale. It's an important rite of passage, and celebrated almost universally. So it isn't some kind of american consumer thing. It also isn't just for spoiled rich kids. Maybe the big difference here is that family and community support is so strong. With family members from a large extended family, plus the inclusion of close friends as "padrinos" (godparents) over specific parts of the party, lots of people each provide a small part of what's needed, and the parents of the girl don't have to shoulder the whole cost. Some of the girls, too, help raise money for their own parties.

There are many little rituals to the party, and they are probably different in every different region of Mexico. Part of the ritual at quincinieras here is the baby doll - the girl has a doll which she gives ritualistically to a smaller girl during the ceremony. It's a celebration of a young girl passing from childhood to a period that is called the "age of dreams", the perfect time in her life. The merits of that particular cultural attitude can be debated, but the idea really is a celebration of a young woman and her possibilities, not a bad idea.

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