American Ethnologist
Volume 36, Issue 4, 2009, Pages 784-798

Stains on their self-discipline: Public health, hygiene, and the disciplining of undocumented immigrant parents in the nation's internal borderlands (Article)

Horton S.* , Barker J.C.
  • a Department of Anthropology, Campus Box 103, University of Colorado Denver, P.O. Box 173364, Denver, CO 80217-3364, United States
  • b Department of Anthropology, History and Social Medicine, University of California, 3333 California Street, San Francisco CA 94143-0850, United States

Abstract

Histories of the role of public health in nation building have revealed the centrality of hygiene to eugenic mechanisms of racial exclusion in the turn-of-the-20th-century United States, yet little scholarship has examined its role in the present day. Through ethnography in a Mexican migrant farmworking community in California's Central Valley, we explore the role of oral hygiene campaigns in racializing Mexican immigrant parents and shaping the substance of their citizenship. Public health officials perceive migrant farmworkers' children's oral disease as a "stain of backwardness," amplifying Mexican immigrants' status as "aliens." We suggest, however, that the recent concern with Mexican immigrant children's oral health blends classic eugenic concerns in public health with neoliberal concerns regarding different immigrant groups' capacity for self-governance. [governmentality, citizenship, public health, eugenics, Mexican immigrants, hygiene, United States]. Copyright © 2009 by the American Anthropological Association.

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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-76449087923&doi=10.1111%2fj.1548-1425.2009.01210.x&partnerID=40&md5=299defb36978c7e3c3af290d449f6e92

DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1425.2009.01210.x
ISSN: 00940496
Cited by: 37
Original Language: English