Drawing Deportation: Art and Resistance among Immigrant Children
From NYU Press:
Drawing Deportation: Art and Resistance among Immigrant Children by Silvia Rodriguez Vega (February)
Young immigrant children often do not have the words to express how their lives are shaped by issues of immigration, legal status, and state-sanctioned violence. Yet they are able to communicate its effects on them using art.
In Drawing Deportation: Art and Resistance among Immigrant Children, Silvia Rodriguez Vega (NYU Press – February 14, 2023) illustrates how the children of immigrants use art to grapple with issues of citizenship, state violence, and belonging.
You can watch Prof. Rodriguez Vega discuss the importance of this project in this 6 minute YouTube video. You can download the final PDF here, or please reply with your address if you’d like to see a finished copy. The book is available for excerpt, and Silvia is available for interviews.
Based on ten years of work with immigrant children as young as six years old in Arizona and California— and featuring an analysis of three hundred drawings, theater performances, and family interviews—Vega provides accounts of children’s challenges with deportation and family separation during the Obama and Trump administrations. While much of the literature on immigrant children depicts them as passive, when viewed through this lens they appear as agents of their own stories.
Drawing Deportation provides key insights into how immigrant children in both states presented creative, out-of-the-box, powerful solutions to the dilemmas that anti-immigrant rhetoric and harsh immigration laws present. Through art, they demonstrated a righteous indignation against societal violence, dehumanization, and death as a tool for navigating a racist, anti-immigrant society.
When children are the agents of their own stories, they can reimagine destructive situations in ways that adults sometimes cannot, offering us alternatives and hope for a better future. At once devastating and revelatory, Drawing Deportation provides a roadmap for how art can provide a safe and necessary space for vulnerable populations to assert their humanity in a world that would rather divest them of it.
About the Author: Silvia Rodriguez Vega is an Assistant Professor at University of California, Santa Barbara, in the Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies.
Advance Praise for Drawing Deportation:
“Rodriguez Vega demonstrates how art will always speak truth to power. Drawing Deportation is the book we’ve been waiting for—with gut-wrenching images that inspire us to continue the fight for social justice, immigrant rights, and children’s happiness! !Viva el teatro! !Vivan los niños!”
~Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers Association and president of the Dolores Huerta Foundation
“Through the lens of their art, Rodriguez Vega unveils not only the traumas and untold angst that our broken immigration system unleashes upon immigrant children’s lives but also the unmistakable resilience and resourcefulness so many demonstrate. Her child-centered, social justice-oriented voice rings loudly and is essential reading for developmentalists, educators, and policy makers who care to understand the realities of these children’s experiences.”
~Carola Suárez-Orozco, Harvard University
“Only Rodriguez Vega could write a book this ambitious, creative, and politically urgent—expressing children’s sheer resilience through art.”
~Dolores Inés Casillas, University of California, Santa Barbara
“Using innovative interdisciplinary methods, Drawing Deportation highlights children’s creativity, agency, and ability to heal. Rodriguez Vega convincingly demonstrates that art allows children to create improved worlds.”
~Leisy J. Abrego, University of California, Los Angeles
“A work of heartbreaking vision and innovative scholarship, this landmark volume brings the power of art and science together to inform immigration policy. Youth provide extraordinary artistic testimony and resistance in confronting the harshest immigration enforcement, while Rodriguez Vega amplifies their voices with her analytic depth, rigor, and brilliance.”
~Hirokazu Yoshikawa, New York University
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