Nicholas De Genova is Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Latino Studies Program at Columbia University. He is a coauthor of Latino Crossings: Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, and the Politics of Race and Citizenship.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments ix Preface xv Introduction: Working the Boundaries 1 I. Politics of Knowledge/Politics of Practice 1. Decolonizing Ethnography 13 2. The “Native’s Point of View”: Immigration and the Immigrant as Objects of U. S. Nationalism 56 3. Locating a Mexican Chicago in the Space of the U. S. Nation-State 95 II. Everyday Life: The Location of Politics 4. The Politics of Production 147 5. Reracialization: Between “Americans” and Blacks 167 III. Historicity: The Politics of Location 6. The Legal Production of Mexican/Migrant “Illegality” 213 Conclusion 251 Notes 255 Bibliography 281 Index 311
Acknowledgments ix Preface xv Introduction: Working the Boundaries 1 I. Politics of Knowledge/Politics of Practice 1. Decolonizing Ethnography 13 2. The “Native’s Point of View”: Immigration and the Immigrant as Objects of U. S. Nationalism 56 3. Locating a Mexican Chicago in the Space of the U. S. Nation-State 95 II. Everyday Life: The Location of Politics 4. The Politics of Production 147 5. Reracialization: Between “Americans” and Blacks 167 III. Historicity: The Politics of Location 6. The Legal Production of Mexican/Migrant “Illegality” 213 Conclusion 251 Notes 255 Bibliography 281 Index 311
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