BY SAMUEL P. HUNTINGTON (Part VII of VIII)
Such eminence transformed
"In
"People can make a living perfectly well in an enclave that speaks Spanish." By 1999, the heads of
The Cuban and Hispanic dominance of
CONTEMPT OF CULTURE
Is
The Hispanization of Miami has been rapid, explicit, and economically driven.
The Hispanization of the Southwest has been slower, unrelenting, and politically driven.
The Cuban influx into
The early Cuban immigrants in
Another major difference concerns the relations of Cubans and Mexicans with their countries of origin. The Cuban community has been united in its hostility to the Castro regime and in its efforts to punish and overthrow that regime. The Cuban government has responded in kind. The Mexican community in the
As their numbers increase, Mexican Americans feel increasingly comfortable with their own culture and often contemptuous of American culture. They demand recognition of their culture and the historic Mexican identity of the U.S. Southwest. They call attention to and celebrate their Hispanic and Mexican past, as in the 1998 ceremonies and festivities in Madrid, New Mexico, attended by the vice president of Spain, honoring the establishment 400 years earlier of the first European settlement in the Southwest, almost a decade before Jamestown. As the New York Times reported in September 1999, Hispanic growth has been able to "help 'Latinize' many Hispanic people who are finding it easier to affirm their heritage.... [T]hey find strength in numbers, as younger generations grow up with more ethnic pride and as a Latin influence starts permeating fields such as entertainment, advertising, and politics." One index foretells the future: In 1998, "José" replaced "Michael" as the most popular name for newborn boys in both