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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 2: Accessible Civil Rights Heritage

Fernández and Jaramillo Abstract

National coverage of immigration and immigrants’ rights speaks with the loudest voice but does not necessarily account for the situations and attitudes at the local level. Using the American Archive of Public Broadcasting and the Bay Area Television Archive, this paper taps into regional narratives constructed about Mexicans’ migration and labor in the late twentieth century. The case studies in this paper are locally produced television documentaries that explore Mexican immigration in a particular town or state far from the southern United States border. Most of these programs situate the appearance of Mexican nationals as a surprise and a disruption to the community’s way of life. Taken together, the immigration narratives constructed on local television reveal not just patterns of responses to demographic shifts happening around the country but regional negotiations of race, gender, class, and civil liberties.

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