Abstract
This article explores the narratives published in the New York Times by and about undocumented and DACAmented immigrants to explore how the abjective status of undocumented migration has shifted to the question of criminality. Using the stories shared by young undocumented immigrants publicly in the New York Times, after the election of Donald Trump, as well as the narratives used by politicians (like Trump), we analyze their narratives to explore what their stories reveal about belonging, identity, abjectivity, and resistance. We argue that abjectivity and illegality has been effectively dislocated by young immigrants, who have successfully challenged the construction of unauthorized migration as an abject status. Politicians, thus, have successfully shifted abjectivity from a question of illegality to a question of criminality, recasting young immigrants as "American dreamers," while maintaining the abject subject as an illegal and criminal subject.