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6.5: Linguistic and Cultural Hybridity- Spanglish and Beyond

  • Page ID
    324874
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    Language is a key site of cultural negotiation. The use of Spanglish—the fluid code-switching between Spanish and English—is not merely a linguistic synchronization but also a creative, strategic adaptation. It is a marker of a distinct, bicultural identity that operates comfortably in two worlds (Zentella 1997). This linguistic hybridity is mirrored in other cultural forms, from music (e.g., Reggaeton, which blends Jamaican, Panamanian, and Puerto Rican influences) to art and literature, where artists like Gloria Anzaldúa theorize the “borderlands”—in-between locations—as a spiritual and cultural space where two worlds collide and create something new (Anzaldúa 1987). In this way, Latinx culture is not a merely an ethnic development pieced together by circumstance, but instead a dynamic, evolving formation where core values like familismo and faith are constantly renegotiated through the processes of migration, settlement, and the pressures of assimilation, resulting in a uniquely U.S.-Latinx hybrid identity.


    6.5: Linguistic and Cultural Hybridity- Spanglish and Beyond is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.