Book Review
Disenchanting citizenship: Mexican migrants
and the boundaries of belonging
Luis F.B. Plascencia
Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, NJ, 2012, 252pp., $25.95, ISBN: 978-0813552804
(paperback)
Latino Studies (2014) 12, 148–150. doi:10.1057/lst.2014.11
Luis Plascencia posits several arguments in
Disenchanting Citizenship, most prominently
that the subjectivity of Mexican migrants who
undergo naturalization in the United States is
conditioned by multiple discourses of citizen-
ship, that citizenship “simultaneously fosters
exclusion and inclusion,” (7) and that the mean-
ing of citizenship is contestable. Plascencia draws
upon both the documentary record, such as
legislation, court cases and newspapers, and
upon his direct observations and interviews,
including conversations with his students in
citizenship classes, open-ended interviews with
officials and community leaders, and attendance
at naturalization ceremonies. It is especially
through his direct observations and interviews
that he contributes to our understanding of
citizenship discourse, Mexican migrants’ hopes
and expectations regarding naturalization, and
the “disenchantment” that many migrants feel
after becoming US citizens.
Plascencia suggests that the allure of naturali-
zation derives not only from the promise to
participate politically, for example, through vot-
ing, but also from the “overlap with parallel
discourses” apparent in rituals such as weddings,
schooling and graduation ceremonies (4).
Particularly through their focus on “fidelity,” he
argues, such rituals prepare migrants to declare
loyalty and accept the state’s conditions for
naturalization, though many are assertive about
their interests and critical about certain aspects
of the process (see below). He suggests, further,
that a variety of agencies and individuals serve to
mediate naturalization and foster fidelities to the
state, and that migrants seek citizenship because
its overlaps with their own needs and desires.
These may include hopes for economic opportu-
nity and/or to become full members of the social
and political community of the United States.
The book’s early chapters establish the theo-
retical and historical framework for the dis-
cussion of Mexican migrants’ experiences in
later chapters. Plascencia reviews relevant scho-
larship and presents a history of citizenship and
naturalization, focusing on the different permu-
tations and open-ended meanings of the concept.
He identifies three discernable, but overlapping,
“discursive fields” in the United States, ranging
from its most narrow legal implications (“juridi-
cal” citizenship), its “sociopolitical” aspects, and
its “everyday uses,” which he suggests scholars
have most neglected. It is within everyday dis-
course that individuals and groups establish
“feelings of belonging, of being part of the
community,” while simultaneously elaborating
© 2014 Macmillan Publishers Ltd. 1476-3435 Latino Studies Vol. 12, 1, 148–150
www.palgrave-journals.com/lst/