Cover image for The Wind Doesn’t Need a Passport : Stories from the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands.
The Wind Doesn’t Need a Passport : Stories from the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands.
Title:
The Wind Doesn’t Need a Passport : Stories from the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands.
Author:
Hendricks, Tyche.
ISBN:
9780520945500
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (247 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Map -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 - Elsa:"We want to Hold our Kids Close Forever" -- Chapter 2 - McAllen/Reynosa: "Most People here Work in the Maquiladoras" -- Chapter 3 - Hachita: "A Fence is Only as Good as its Weakest Point" -- Chapter 4 - Nogales/Nogales: "If they get Sick here, we Care for them" -- Chapter 5 - Sells: "O' Odham First and American or Mexican Second" -- Chapter 6 - Mexicali: "The Wind doesn't need a Passport" -- Chapter 7 - Jacumba: "The Border is a Sham" -- Chapter 8 - Tijuana: "A Constant Drumbeat of Killings" -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
Award-winning journalist Tyche Hendricks has explored the U.S.-Mexico borderlands by car and by foot, on horseback, and in the back of a pickup truck. She has shared meals with border residents, listened to their stories, and visited their homes, churches, hospitals, farms, and jails. In this dazzling portrait of one of the least understood and most debated regions in the country, Hendricks introduces us to the ordinary Americans and Mexicans who live there-cowboys and Indians, factory workers and physicians, naturalists and nuns. A new picture of the borderlands emerges, and we find that this region is not the dividing line so often imagined by Americans, but is a common ground alive with the energy of cultural exchange and international commerce, burdened with too-rapid growth and binational conflict, and underlain with a deep sense of history.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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