The Mestizo Nation and the Linguistic Operations of Racial Invisibility in El Salvador
The Mestizo Nation and the Linguistic Operations of Racial Invisibility in El Salvador
- Amparo Marroquín ParducciAmparo Marroquín ParducciDepartament of Communication and Culture, Central American University José Simeón Cañas
Summary
The media landscape, for more than a century, has shaped El Salvador as a mestizo nation and was constructed through the invisibilization of indigenous and Black groups that populated Salvadoran territory. The Salvadoran media has constructed the idea of racial otherness and discriminated against and denied the rights and existence of indigenous peoples. This occurred in three historical periods. One, before 1932, when the media configured the idea of a mestizo nation, without making the indigenous world visible. Second, after 1932, a moment that began with the massacre of more than 25,000 indigenous people at the hands of the army. In this period, the media configure the indigenous person as a violent being that has already been almost completely exterminated. Finally, the period that follows after the peace agreements, in 1992, where the media recovers the indigenous past, but without hiding the disgust that this produces. In every period, indigenous voices are silenced and deprived of access to community or indigenous media.
Subjects
- Race, Ethnicity, and Communication