The quinceañera, a rite of passage marking the 15th birthday of a Latina girl, is an important site of language and identity enactment. Past research (Horowitz 1993; Davalos 1996; Cantú 1999, 2002; and Alvarez 2007) provides ample evidence of the shifting nature of the quinceañera tradition in the U.S., yet none address language use in depth. Given that non-English languages like Spanish are rarely spoken in the U.S. beyond the grandchildren of immigrants, and the fact that language proficiency does not necessarily play a central role in the construction of Latino/a ethnic identity, this study seeks to identify the ways in which the Spanish language still plays a role in U.S. quinceañeras. Survey responses were analyzed from 384 students attending nine different high schools in Chicago, Illinois. We explored responses that described Chicago quinceañeras generally, connections between this celebration and Latina identity, and the roles of Spanish within the enactments of quinceañeras. We conclude that quinceañeras in Chicago simultaneously bolster and reflect Spanish language use in the family. There was, however, some degree of hybridization involving the use of English in several arenas. But for the time being, at least among first and second generation Chicago Latinas, the quinceañera provides a domain for Spanish language use and ethnic identity performance.
2013. Heritage Learners of Spanish. In The Handbook of Spanish Second Language Acquisition, ► pp. 404 ff.
Reyes, Iliana, Charmian Kenner, Luis C. Moll & Marjorie F. Orellana
2012. Biliteracy Among Children and Youths. Reading Research Quarterly 47:3 ► pp. 307 ff.
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