Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 01 Sept 2015

Gaining a Voice: Storytelling and Undocumented Youth Activism in Chicago*

Page Range: 345 – 360
DOI: 10.17813/1086-671X-20-3-345
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In recent years, undocumented youth have come out of the shadows to claim their rights in the United States. By sharing their stories, these youth gained a voice in the public debate. This article integrates insights from the literature on narratives and emotions to study how story-telling is employed within the undocumented youth movement in Chicago. I argue that undocumented youth strategically use storytelling for diverging purposes depending on the context, type of interaction, and audience involved. Based on ethnographic research, I show that storytelling allows them to incorporate new members, mobilize constituencies, and legitimize grievances. In each of these contexts, emotions play a key role in structuring the social transaction between storyteller and audience. Storytelling is thus a community-building, mobilizing, and claims-making practice in social movements. At a broader level, this case study demonstrates the power of storytelling as a political tool for marginalized populations.

Copyright: © 2015 Hank Johnston DBA Mobilization Journal 2015

Contributor Notes

* I would like to thank the following people for their support: Eva Swyngedouw, Andreas Glaeser, Marco Martiniello, Mario Small, Roberto Gonzales and Erik Swyngedouw. I would also like to express my gratitude to the research assistants who worked on this project: Jonathan Rodrigues and Iliya Gutin. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant #1129651), the Social Science Research Council (Dissertation Proposal Development Fellowship), the Mellon Foundation (Dissertation-Year Write-up Fellowship), and the University of Chicago Human Rights Program (Research Grant).

† Thomas Swerts is a post-doctoral fellow at the Center for Inequalities, Poverty, Social Exclusion, and the City (OASeS), Department of Sociology, University of Antwerp, Antwerpen, Belgium. Please direct all correspondence to thomas.swerts@uantwerpen.be

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