The history of the maquiladoras has been punctuated by workers’ organized resistance to abysmal working and living conditions. Over years of involvement in such movements, Rosemary Hennessy was struck by an elusive but significant feature of these struggles: the extent to which organizing is driven by attachments of affection and antagonism, belief, betrayal, and identification. What precisely is the “affective” dimension of organizing for justice? Are affects and emotions the same? And how can their value be calculated? Fires on the Border takes up these questions of labor and community organizing—its “affect-culture”—on Mexico’s northern border from the early 1970s to the present day. Through these campaigns, Hennessy illuminates the attachments and identifications that motivate people to act on behalf of one another and that bind them to a common cause. The book’s unsettling, even jarring, narratives bring together empirical and ethnographic accounts—of specific campaigns, the untold stories of gay and lesbian organizers, love and utopian longing—in concert with materialist theories of affect and the critical good sense of Mexican organizers. Teasing out the integration of affect-culture in economic relations and cultural processes, Hennessy provides evidence that sexuality and gender as strong affect attractors are incorporated in the harvesting of surplus labor. At the same time, workers’ testimonies confirm that the capacities for bonding and affective attachment, far from being entirely at the service of capital, are at the very heart of social movements devoted to sustaining life.
Border Fire
Compiles Mexican-American literature from both sides of the border, introducing stories, essays, poetry, and criticism by such writers as Alfonso Reyes, Rudolfo Anaya, Xavier Villaurutia, and Carlos Fuentes.
After an alien invasion of Earth, the human beings who have not fled the planet or been killed prepare to battle their enemies
Expanding societies collide in showers of sparks, and cascading sparks eventually ignite fires. It did surprise him that the Wayholder Empire had struck first—and at New Napa, of all places. What could they want there? “How long ago?
The aliens wanted to use their world for war games. The humans were ordered to leave or die. Some left. Some died. Some didn't. This is the story of Lieutenant Darcy Lee.
Through beautiful ethnography and a uniquely personal perspective, Threshold provides a new way to understand politicized issues ranging from border security and undocumented migration to public access to healthcare today.
Some articles just listed what dead they could: “David Lockhart, his father, mother, sister, and two children; William Kilpatrick, sen. his wife, son, and daughter; this is the old man whose mill Mr. Gilmour turned, and whose cleanly ...
This 2nd edition includes a new introductory essay highlighting the key developments in intersecting scholarship that have arisen since the book's original publication.
In The Fire Next Door, Ted Galen Carpenter boldly conveys the growing horror overtaking Mexico and makes the case that the only effective strategy for the United States is to abandon its failed drug prohibition policy, thus depriving drug ...