The English word Latino (Latina is the feminine form) derives from the Spanish word latinoamericano *(the Portuguese word is latino-americano) and most often refers to inhabitants of Latin America, and their descendents living outside of Latin America. Its usual connotation is Ibero-American or Spanish American; Francophone Canadians are not normally referred to as Latino, even though they speak a Romance language.
The concept of "Latin America" was coined by the French in the 1800s as a means of legitimizing French influence over the Spanish-speaking countries of the Americas; compare Latin Europe. Napoleon III, cited Amérique Latine and Indochine as goals for expansion during his reign. He proposed the Monarchy in Mexico headed by the Austrian Archduke Maximillian or Maximilian I of Mexico. The term emphasized a common culture and history of the Latin-speaking peoples, as opposed to the Germanic language-speaking countries of "Anglo-America".
In the U.S. setting, the term "Latino" is sometimes applied to immigrants from Hispanophone countries in North, Central and South America and their descendants. Brazilians are sometimes categorized as Latino, and sometimes self-categorize as such. Community activists often define "Latino" as encompassing Latin American immigrants only, thus excluding the Spanish immigrants in the U.S. The U.S. inhabitants having a background in countries of the Western Hemisphere where other Romance languages are widespread (such as Aruba or Haiti are usually thought of as "Caribbean" more than "Latino". Inhabitants of French Guiana and the French West Indies, for example, are typically thought to have more in common culturally with English-speaking West Indians than they do with residents of Mexico and Central and South America.
The heavy promotion of the term "Latino" by European- and African-descended Cubans in Miami to apply to the much larger Mexican population that is largely indigenous has also fueled critiques of the term as it is currently applied. The media application of the term "Latino" in conjunction with non-Latino indigenous images (such as Aztec and Mayan pyramids) also stirs debate about an "umbrella" term encompassing people of distinct races and civilizations.
Latin American culture | Ethnic groups in the United States
Latino | Latino | Latino | Latinus | Latino | Latynos | Latino