Buch, Englisch, 214 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm
Five Contemporary Case Studies of Society and Space
Buch, Englisch, 214 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm
ISBN: 978-1-4625-3386-2
Verlag: Guilford Publications
Examining the links between society, space, and place, this unique text introduces students to the ecological and cultural richness of Mexico and the diversity, tenacity, and resilience of its people. David M. Walker presents compelling ethnographic case studies of Mexico City's historic center and the adjacent Tepito neighborhood; life in the border city of Tijuana; and urban Mexican garbage networks. Cases also explore Afromexican identity in the Costa Chica of Guerrero and Oaxaca, as well as the Indigeneous Zoque people's stewardship of the remote Chimalapas region. Readers are immersed in the stories of real individuals and their livelihood strategies; natural and built environments; values and faith practices; leisure activities; foodways; involvements in local to global cultural, political, and economic processes; and more. Instructive features include topical vignettes, discussion questions, and suggested readings and online resources related to each case.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction
- Chapter Outline
- Why Study Mexico?
- Social Relations, Society, and Space: What Is Social Geography?
- Indigenous Mexico
- Indigenous Civilizations
- Indigenous Technology
- Mestizaje
- Indigenous Identity and Mestizaje
- 20th- and 21st-Century Mexico
- La Dictádura Perfecta
- Shifts from PRI Economics to Neoliberalism
- Zapatismo
- Multicultural Mexico?
- Methods and Book Online
- Chapter 2: Shrines of the Times: The Social Geographies of Contested Space in Tepito and the Historic Center of Mexico City
- Chapter 3: Identity and Place: The Social Geographies in the Costa Chica of Guerrero and Oaxaca
- Chapter 4: The Social Geographies of Tijuana: Urbanization at the U.S.–Mexico Border
- Chapter 5: In the Dumps: The Social Geographies of Trash
- Chapter 6: Zoque Indigenous-Produced Space: Social Geographies of Los Chimalapas
- Who Is This Book For?
- How to Use this Book
- Suggested Readings
2. Shrines of the Times: The Social Geographies of Contested Space in Tepito and the Historic Center of Mexico City
- Chapter Outline
- A Brief History of Mexico City
- What Is La Santa Muerte?
- Santa Muerte Worshippers in the Tepito Neighborhood
- Rapid Urbanization and Economic Shifts from ISI to Neoliberalism
- The Implosion of ISI
- Vignette: Migration, Emigration, and Neoliberalism
- The Production of the Informal Economy
- Coping with Neoliberalism
- Saving the Historic Center? But from Whom and for Whom? El Programa de Rescate del Centro Histórico
- The Appropriation or Rebranding of Tepito
- The Appropriation of Urban Space through Street Vending, Worship, and Food: Día de los Muertos in Tepito at Number 12 Alfarería Street
- Neoliberal Success?
- Conclusion
- Discussion Questions
- Suggested Readings
3. Identity and Place: The Social Geographies in the Costa Chica of Guerrero and Oaxaca
- Singing the National Anthem in Mexico City
- Where Is the Costa Chica Today?
- Regions in Oaxaca and Guerrero
- Africans in Mexico
- Vignette: Geography Matters: Human–Environment–Diasporic Interactions and Environmental Determinism
- Afromexicanos of La Costa Chica: A Legendary History
- Mestizaje–Raza Cosmica
- Identity and Regions
- Indigeneity and the Emergent Afromexicano Civil Society
- From Indigenous Autonomy to Black Recognition
- Fissures between Place and Identity
- Does Getting Counted Count? Economic and Social Development in the Costa Chica
- Discussion Questions
- Suggested Readings
4. The Social Geographies of Tijuana: Urbanization at the U.S.–Mexico Border
- Migration, Irregular Settlements and Neighborhood Formation
- Introduction
- Where Is Tijuana?
- Tijuana’s Topography and Its Impacts on the Environment
- A City Shaped from Both Sides
- Vice Tourism and Urban Expansion
- Social Geographies of Housing in Tijuana: Irregular Settlements
- PRONAF and Geographies of Uneven Urbanization
- Border City Morphology
- The Border Industrialization Program (BIP) and Urbanization
- A Cosmopolitan Mexican City: Demographics and Economic Diversification
- Tijuanenses Embody the Social Geographies of Music and Gastronomy
- Tijuana Music
- Tijuana Gastronomy
- The Mexican Dream in Tijuana?
- Discussion Questions
- Suggested Readings
5. In the Dumps: The Social Geographies of Trash
- Waiting on the Trash Man
- Chapter Outline
- Who Are the Pepenadores?
- Demographics and Garbage
- Conceptualizing the Value of Garbage
- A Day in the Life of Mexico City Garbage
- Vignette: The Temporal–Social Construction of Value
- Pepenador Efficiency, the Informal Economy, and the Social Structure of Urban Mexico
- Pepenadores, Caciques--Client Patron Relations, and the Social Structure of Urban Mexico
- The Neoliberalization of Garbage
- Environmental Activism and the Closing of Bordo-Poniente Landfill
- The Professionalization of Caciqusmo: la Confederación Nacional de Industriales de Metales y Recicladores (CONIMER)
- Alpuyeca Does Not Want Mexico City Trash
- Can La Pepena Be Included in Mexico City’s Waste Management Transformation?
- Discussion Questions
- Suggested Reading
6. Zoque Indigenous-Produced Space: Social Geographies of Los Chimalapas
- Introduction
- The Second Most Remote Region in All of Mexico
- Reverse Settler Colonialism
- State Government Structure, Customs and Traditions, and Communal Property Communities in Los Chimalapas
- Structures in Los Chimalapas
- Geography, Resources, and Politics in Los Chimalapas
- Confrontation and Cooptation in Los Chimalapas
- The Conflation of Nature and Society in Los Chimalapas
- Ethnospatial Politics
- Conclusion
- Discussion Questions
- Suggested Resource