Winner, 2023 NCA Ethnography Division Best Book Award
Wilfredo Alvarez’s Everyday Dirty Work: Invisibility, Communication, and Immigrant Labor is an exploration into co-cultural communication practices within the workplace. Specifically, Alvarez investigates how Latin American immigrant janitors communicate from their marginalized standpoints in a predominantly White academic organization. He examines how custodial workers perceive, interpret, and thematize routine messages regarding race, ethnicity, social class, immigrant status, and occupation, and how those messages and overall communicative experiences affect both their work and personal lives.
A Latin American immigrant himself, Alvarez relates his own experiences to those of the research participants. His positionality informs and enhances his research as he demonstrates how everyday interpersonal encounters create discursive spaces that welcome or disqualify people based on symbolic and social capital. Alvarez offers valuable insights into the lived experiences of critical––but often undervalued and invisible––organizational members. Through theoretical insights and research data, he provides practical recommendations for organizational leaders to improve how they can relate to and support all stakeholders.
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Wilfredo Alvarez is Associate Professor of Communication and Media at Utica University.
<p>Today, in the United States, the (Latin American) immigrant as a social imaginary is filled with tension and disapproval (Villegas, 2019). And, worse, that imaginary maps from the abstract concept of an immigrant to actual immigrant <i>bodies</i>, contributing to the hypermarginalization of Latin American immigrants (Bogel-Burroughs, 2019). Accordingly, public discourse is not just conceptual: It can have serious implications for immigrants in many social contexts, beginning with the link between societal discourses and interpersonal interactions (K. R. Chávez, 2009). Immigrants are “read” as unwanted and potentially dangerous by individuals who draw from negative societal discourses to make sense of and to interact with immigrants (Alvarez, 2018). In other words, the target group of the discourse becomes the embodied representation of those discourses; consequently, this group is the target of those who follow the fundamental ideas that those discourses advance. As a whole, these observations suggest that when a group is demonized consistently in popular culture, it typically is the case that we hear about aggression toward those group members (Alvarez, 2016, 2018).</p><p>Media and societal images are deeply ingrained in interpersonal interactions between dominant group members and immigrants, especially in the case of a power differential (e.g., police and immigrant, supervisor and worker). A prime example of this transfer from negative discourse to negative interactions (especially aggression) is the Chandler Roundup, a July 1997 immigration raid in Chandler, Arizona. In her study of how law enforcement agents and presumed migrants interact, K. R. Chávez (2009) discusses the role of history in shaping those interactions, especially in historically conflict-ridden contexts such as the state of Arizona (i.e., conflicts due to Mexican immigration). Law enforcement officers’ perception of brown-skinned people as outsiders who deserved to be removed from the country was, in part, driven by the corresponding societal narrative.</p><p>Another, more recent example of this dynamic is one of the many mass shootings in the United States in 2019 (a total of over 300 at the time of writing). A young White male drove nine hours to El Paso, Texas, and opened fire on a group of Walmart shoppers (mostly Mexicans and Mexican Americans). In this instance, the killer was a self-avowed White supremacist who sought to kill Mexicans because he perceived that they were “invading” the country (Bogel-Burroughs, 2019). This rhetorical framing is increasingly common in mass media and encourages some consumers of that media to act accordingly. This shooting has accelerated a national conversation about the relationship between the promotion of hateful discourse in the mass media (social media in particular) and physical violence—specifically, race-based hate against primarily Black and brown people (Alvarez, 2021, 2022; Ott, 2017; Ott & Dickinson, 2019).</p><p>Understanding the influence of broad societal messages on interpersonal interactions also requires analyzing common social contexts such as the workplace (Zlolniski, 2003). The struggle for legitimacy and inclusion is especially amplified at work, where communication is central. Still, the communicative experiences of working-class Latin American immigrants in service occupations have not been well documented (for an exception, see Amason et al., 1999). For instance, a search in multiple major academic online databases yields only a few relevant articles from the keywords “Latina/o/x” or “Latin American,” “Organizational” or “Workplace,” “Service Work(ers)” and “Communication.” This outcome suggests that researchers have not seized the opportunity to conduct investigations that illuminate the communication-related service work experiences of Latin American immigrants in the United States. My work is motivated by this opportunity. In the following sections, I will identify the key communication processes that are at the center of understanding this book’s subject in depth.</p>
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