Quantcast Chicago Flame
College Media Network

Current Issue:

UIC, Pilsen speak out against a misleading American Girl

Latino Studies offers community forum

James Monteleone

Issue date: 3/1/05 Section: News
  • Print
  • Email
Forum panelists discuss the impact of the Marisol doll story on the Pilsen neighborhood
Forum panelists discuss the impact of the Marisol doll story on the Pilsen neighborhood

Marisol Luna is a Mexican-American character depicted by the newest American Girl book in which she learns she must leave her Pilsen neighborhood for the suburb of Des Plaines. In the story she says, "[My mother] explained it was no place for me to grow up. It was dangerous, and there was no place for me to play."

After the doll was released in January, the Pilsen community expressed outrage over the story's misrepresentation of their community.

"We had an opportunity to shine, but someone at a national level considered Pilsen a dangerous neighborhood," said Gloria Rodriguez, a student at St. Ignatius High School and Pilsen resident.

In response to American Girl's depiction of the Chicago's Pilsen community, UIC's Latino Studies program hosted a community panel discussion Thursday, Feb. 24 at the Rudy Lozano branch of the Chicago Public Library in Pilsen. The program was entitled "Marisol Comes Back to Pilsen."

The program consisted of four panel speakers who were familiar with different aspects of the Pilsen community. Francis Aparicio, director of the Latino Studies program at UIC, moderated the discussion.

Christina Gomez, a professor of sociology at Northeastern Illinois University and panel speaker, said that the aspects of gentrification are not addressed by the story. "Many people can no longer afford to live here," she said. With developers buying out property to rehab and re-sell as well as the university "growing by the day," Gomez feels the American Girl story is missing a complex aspect of the neighborhood.

She feels the book also fails to include the issues of Marisol's strong education.

"These issues are not in the book. That's something that can be done better by American Girl," Gomez said.

Claudia Romero, another panel speaker and board member of the Pilsen Alliance said she would have liked to see a more realistic depiction of the neighborhood.

"You see people coming from the suburbs to my neighborhood... they look at our murals, eat at our restaurants, and hear the music coming from our stores... They don't seem to be afraid. Either we're the latest zoo, or maybe we have something here."

Rodriguez, who was also one of the panel's speakers on behalf of Pilsen youth, said living in Pilsen never led her to dong drugs or joining a gang. "Pilsen has taught me we have to fight for what we want," she said.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Advertisement