Unraveling Time: Thirty Years of Ethnography in Cuenca, Ecuador
Autor Ann Milesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 dec 2022
Unraveling Time traces the enduring consequences of political and social movements, transnational migration, and economic development in Cuenca. Miles reckons with details that often escape less committed observers, suggesting that we learn a good deal more when we look back on whole lives. Practicing what she calls an ethnography of accrual, Miles takes a long view, where decades of seemingly disparate experiences coalesce into cultural transformation. Her approach not only reveals what change has meant in a major Latin American city but also serves as a reflection on ethnography itself.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781477326190
ISBN-10: 1477326197
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: University of Texas Press
Colecția University of Texas Press
ISBN-10: 1477326197
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: University of Texas Press
Colecția University of Texas Press
Notă biografică
Ann Miles is a professor of anthropology and the director of the University Center for the Humanities at Western Michigan University. She is the author of From Cuenca to Queens and Living with Lupus.
Cuprins
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1. The Ethnography of Accrual: 1988–2020
- Dateline 1990: Remembering and Forgetting
- Chapter 2. Making a Cosmopolitan City
- Dateline 1988–1989: The Virgin of Cajas
- Chapter 3. Single Women in the City
- Dateline 1988–2020: Alejandra
- Chapter 4. Ni de Aqui, Ni de Allá
- Dateline 1988–2020: Blanca
- Chapter 5. The Gringo Invasion
- Dateline 2015–2019: Soon the Tourists Will Have the Place to Themselves
- Chapter 6. Thinking about Endings
- Notes
- References
- Index
Recenzii
Unraveling Time shows the anthropologist working on her craft. Through long-term, sensitive ethnography, Ann Miles captures the passing of time and the texture of change. She reveals her Cuencan partners as men and women grappling with economic shocks, a city transformed by migration, and the drama of sustaining transnational family ties. With her careful observations, Miles shows how they find meaning in all that has happened over the decades. It's a wonderful work of ethnographic reflection.
A thoroughly engrossing examination of gender, migration, and the evolving sociopolitical landscape of Cuenca, Ecuador, over the last three decades. With the attention, deep insight, and kinship with her interlocutors that can come only from long-term ethnographic engagement, Ann Miles introduces us to the complicated lives of the women and men she has followed for years. Through the sensitively told stories of these Cuencanos, we come to understand both the important (and conflicting) ways that transnationalism has shaped an entire country and the approaches through which one anthropologist has tried to make intellectual and emotional sense of a lifetime of ethnographic accruals. A superb book and must a read for scholars of transnationalism, Latin American migration, and gender in South America.
This book joins a growing number of ethnographies by authors who reflect on their field work and research, grappling with the dynamic nature of temporal-spatial interactions that proceed apace as ethnographers and their interlocutors continue making their own histories and cultures far beyond the life of the anthropologist.
Miles’s engaging prose makes the reading of this book not only informative but also highly enjoyable. . . . Reflecting on the arbitrariness of endings over time, Miles concludes an outstanding book whose ending, I hope, is just for the time being.
A rare intellectual gift...To learn with and about Miles’ ethnographic work in Cuenca, Ecuador, over the last three decades is a wonderous time travel experience.
The essence of the story told in this book lies in its methodology—time itself. The book convincingly argues that this sustained engagement [over 30 years] brings us as close to people’s lived experiences as social science can get. Few other works highlight the existential turns of life as sharply as Unraveling Time: lights and shadows, remembering and forgetting debts paid and unpaid, origins and endings, tragedies and ironies. There’s a deep poignancy in the author’s commitment to bearing witness to the lives of Cuenca’s residents over so many years. After Miles’s initial journey to Ecuador in 1988, people wrote to her in Michigan and asked her not to forget them. She has remained true to her promise.
Descriere
A compelling chronicle of economic, political, and social development in Cuenca.