Homelands: Four Friends, Two Countries, and the Fate of the Great Mexican-American Migration
Autor Alfredo Corchadoen Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 dec 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781632865557
ISBN-10: 1632865556
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1632865556
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Chronicles one of modern America's most profound transformations-during which Mexican-Americans swell to become our largest single minority, changing the color, economy and culture of America itself. The book will be a must-read for policy makers, activists, Mexican-Americas, and all those wishing to truly understand the background of our ongoing immigration debate.
Notă biografică
Alfredo Corchado is the Mexico Border correspondent for the Dallas Morning News and author of Midnight in Mexico. He is a Nieman, Lannan, USMEX, Woodrow Wilson, and Rockefeller fellow and the winner of the Maria Moors Cabot Prize and Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award for courage in journalism. Corchado lives in Mexico City but calls the border home. @ajcorchado
Recenzii
Corchado's casual, friendly prose flies under the raging policy debates of the moment to engage us in incredibly personal stories of friendship and family. Before you realize it, he has defeated your cynicism and disarmed your political reflexes to bring you into a lively conversation on the nature of citizenship and culture in the most human of terms. Homelands helps us to see ourselves in each other, and in so doing it gets at the genius of a country that has always aspired to be one out of many.
With the country at odds over immigration, now is the perfect time to learn more about the issue. Journalist Alfredo Corchado provides an opportunity in his latest book, Homelands.
Corchado's book offers much-needed nuance and serves as a sober reminder that today's immigration challenges are the result of decades of misguided American policy. . . amid yet another immigration crackdown that will undoubtedly carry its own consequences for decades to come, it would behoove policymakers to pick up Corchado's book and take pause.
Economic needs, shared history, culture and intimate ties all seem likely to outlast the most recent wave of anti-immigrant hostility. 'Can we live without one another, Mexico and the United States? Can we even imagine that?' Why, this book asks, would we even want to?
In "Homelands" Corchado tells two stories at once - that of his life as a bicultural, naturalized American reporter and the larger saga of a migration surge that occurred at the same time . . . his book explains broad trends with engaging ease.
In Homelands [Corchado] recounts his experiences and those of three friends--altogether, three Mexicans and an American of Mexican descent--as they grapple with having two countries to call home. . . It eloquently chronicles the effects of the North American Free-Trade Agreement between Mexico, America and Canada, the militarisation of the border after the attacks of September 11th 2001 and Mr Trump's victory.
In addition to providing historical context for the current debate on immigration, this book is a timely and personal meditation on the concept of 'migrant' in the United States.
Vividly and entertainingly rendered . . . Homelands performs a valuable service. Politics, after all, isn't the only way that a disenfranchised and vilified community can counteract the stereotypes, misunderstandings, and even stupidities imposed by others. It can also do so if its expatriate sons and daughters, who have traveled far and succeeded, despite the odds, return to help. These voices, like Corchado's, will make the voyage easier for those who will surely follow.
A mix of memoir and deep research into various Mexican and American political immigration issues . . . An affecting, timely book.
The latest from the Dallas Morning News' award-winning borderland correspondent is a breezy, expansive narrative that traces the Great Mexican Migration of the second half of the twentieth century.
A sensitive, thought-provoking self-portrait of Mexican Americans who, wherever they go, call the borderlands home.
Corchado reports from across borders with the advantage of seeing the world with multiple perspectives. In the end, it's those who have the least who inspire Corchado the most. No matter where we call home, this book is an inspiration.
Corchado achieves a unique meld of vivid, deeply personal storytelling, meticulous reporting, and clear, concise explanations of the impact of both political and economic policies.
This personal, moving tale illuminates the very heart of the polarizing immigration debate that is roiling America today.
Alfredo Corchado's soul is fondly and firmly rooted in both the U.S. and his native Mexico. In tracing the life journeys of himself and three friends, he provides a window to the migrating millions helping to transform North America in the 21st Century. Homelands is an evocative and essential tale for our times.
This book comes at a pivotal time in American history, when millions are demanding for a wall to separate the United States from Mexico and to deport illegal immigrants. . . . I definitely suggest this read to help understand how Mexican descendants help to shape America as a whole.
Invigorating self-analysis and spot-on social critique . . . Homelands is not only a book that is right on time, it is book that is long overdue.
Homelands is an eloquently gripping testimonio, both a memoir of the author's struggles to develop a successful binational identity and a critique of our nation's shifting, fractured immigration policies.
Alfredo Corchado's moving and deeply personal story traces through his own journey and those of three friends, the odyssey of generations of Mexican immigrants. Homelands is a masterful tale--both heartfelt and informative. Pitch perfect.
In this multigenerational coming-of-age story, Alfredo Corchado offers a unique exploration of what it means to be Mexican and American, to be Mexican in America, to be American in Mexico. A welcome and timely tonic about immigrants and identity.
With the country at odds over immigration, now is the perfect time to learn more about the issue. Journalist Alfredo Corchado provides an opportunity in his latest book, Homelands.
Corchado's book offers much-needed nuance and serves as a sober reminder that today's immigration challenges are the result of decades of misguided American policy. . . amid yet another immigration crackdown that will undoubtedly carry its own consequences for decades to come, it would behoove policymakers to pick up Corchado's book and take pause.
Economic needs, shared history, culture and intimate ties all seem likely to outlast the most recent wave of anti-immigrant hostility. 'Can we live without one another, Mexico and the United States? Can we even imagine that?' Why, this book asks, would we even want to?
In "Homelands" Corchado tells two stories at once - that of his life as a bicultural, naturalized American reporter and the larger saga of a migration surge that occurred at the same time . . . his book explains broad trends with engaging ease.
In Homelands [Corchado] recounts his experiences and those of three friends--altogether, three Mexicans and an American of Mexican descent--as they grapple with having two countries to call home. . . It eloquently chronicles the effects of the North American Free-Trade Agreement between Mexico, America and Canada, the militarisation of the border after the attacks of September 11th 2001 and Mr Trump's victory.
In addition to providing historical context for the current debate on immigration, this book is a timely and personal meditation on the concept of 'migrant' in the United States.
Vividly and entertainingly rendered . . . Homelands performs a valuable service. Politics, after all, isn't the only way that a disenfranchised and vilified community can counteract the stereotypes, misunderstandings, and even stupidities imposed by others. It can also do so if its expatriate sons and daughters, who have traveled far and succeeded, despite the odds, return to help. These voices, like Corchado's, will make the voyage easier for those who will surely follow.
A mix of memoir and deep research into various Mexican and American political immigration issues . . . An affecting, timely book.
The latest from the Dallas Morning News' award-winning borderland correspondent is a breezy, expansive narrative that traces the Great Mexican Migration of the second half of the twentieth century.
A sensitive, thought-provoking self-portrait of Mexican Americans who, wherever they go, call the borderlands home.
Corchado reports from across borders with the advantage of seeing the world with multiple perspectives. In the end, it's those who have the least who inspire Corchado the most. No matter where we call home, this book is an inspiration.
Corchado achieves a unique meld of vivid, deeply personal storytelling, meticulous reporting, and clear, concise explanations of the impact of both political and economic policies.
This personal, moving tale illuminates the very heart of the polarizing immigration debate that is roiling America today.
Alfredo Corchado's soul is fondly and firmly rooted in both the U.S. and his native Mexico. In tracing the life journeys of himself and three friends, he provides a window to the migrating millions helping to transform North America in the 21st Century. Homelands is an evocative and essential tale for our times.
This book comes at a pivotal time in American history, when millions are demanding for a wall to separate the United States from Mexico and to deport illegal immigrants. . . . I definitely suggest this read to help understand how Mexican descendants help to shape America as a whole.
Invigorating self-analysis and spot-on social critique . . . Homelands is not only a book that is right on time, it is book that is long overdue.
Homelands is an eloquently gripping testimonio, both a memoir of the author's struggles to develop a successful binational identity and a critique of our nation's shifting, fractured immigration policies.
Alfredo Corchado's moving and deeply personal story traces through his own journey and those of three friends, the odyssey of generations of Mexican immigrants. Homelands is a masterful tale--both heartfelt and informative. Pitch perfect.
In this multigenerational coming-of-age story, Alfredo Corchado offers a unique exploration of what it means to be Mexican and American, to be Mexican in America, to be American in Mexico. A welcome and timely tonic about immigrants and identity.