Flag waving as visual argument: 2006 immigration demonstrations and cultural citizenship. Pineda, R. D. & Sowards, S. K. Argumentation & Advocacy, 43(3/4):164–174, 2007. On Dropbox.
Flag waving as visual argument: 2006 immigration demonstrations and cultural citizenship [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
In AALibrary; notes in Evernote. During the 2006 immigration rallies and demonstrations, hundreds of thousands of immigrants and their supporters turned out to protest proposed immigration legislation. Flag waving was a key element of these demonstrations, in which participants employed both the US. flag and other national flags, most prominently Mexican flags. In this essay, we examine how flag waving functions as a visual argument that offers possibillties for establishing cultural and national citizenship and creating a visual form of refutation. Specifically, we argue that anti-immigration advocates see foreign flags as visual ideographs that represent recent immigrants' failure to assimilate, immigrants' deviant cultural practices, and failure of law enforcement. Immigrant rights advocates see foreign flags as a visual ideograph that represents cultural pride, unity, and civic participation that creates space for cultural citizenship. These oppositional tensions create a framework for understanding flag waving as a refutative process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
@article{pineda_flag_2007,
	title = {Flag waving as visual argument: 2006 immigration demonstrations and cultural citizenship},
	volume = {43},
	issn = {10511431},
	url = {http://login.ezproxy.lib.umn.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip,uid&db=cms&AN=30751502&site=ehost-live},
	abstract = {In AALibrary; notes in Evernote. During the 2006 immigration rallies and demonstrations, hundreds of thousands of immigrants and their supporters turned out to protest proposed immigration legislation. Flag waving was a key element of these demonstrations, in which participants employed both the US. flag and other national flags, most prominently Mexican flags. In this essay, we examine how flag waving functions as a visual argument that offers possibillties for establishing cultural and national citizenship and creating a visual form of refutation. Specifically, we argue that anti-immigration advocates see foreign flags as visual ideographs that represent recent immigrants' failure to assimilate, immigrants' deviant cultural practices, and failure of law enforcement. Immigrant rights advocates see foreign flags as a visual ideograph that represents cultural pride, unity, and civic participation that creates space for cultural citizenship. These oppositional tensions create a framework for understanding flag waving as a refutative process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]},
	number = {3/4},
	journal = {Argumentation \& Advocacy},
	author = {Pineda, Richard D. and Sowards, Stacey K.},
	year = {2007},
	note = {On Dropbox.},
	keywords = {3.DL\&R participant paper citations, cultural citizenship, demonstration, law and culture, visual argument, visual communication, visual ideograph, visual refutation},
	pages = {164--174}
}

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