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Over the last three decades, migration from Mexico to the United States has moved beyond the borderlands to diverse communities across the country, with the most striking transformations in American suburbs and small towns. This study explores the challenges encountered by Mexican families as they endeavor to find their place in the U.S. by focusing on Kennett Square, a small farming village in Pennsylvania known as the 'Mushroom Capital of the World'. In a highly readable account based on extensive fieldwork among Mexican migrants and their American neighbors, Debra Lattanzi Shutika explores the issues of belonging and displacement that are central concerns for residents in communities that have become new destinations for Mexican settlement. "Beyond the Borderlands" also completes the circle of migration by following migrant families as they return to their hometown in Mexico, providing an illuminating perspective of the tenuous lives of Mexicans residing in, but not fully part of, two worlds.
Debra Lattanzi Shutika is a folklorist and Associate Professor of English at George Mason University.
ContentsList of IllustrationsAcknowledgments1. Introduction: New Borders and Destinations2. “I give thanks to God, after that, the United States”:Everyday Life in Textitlán3. La Casa Vacía: Meanings and Memories in Abandoned Immigrant Houses4. In the Shadows and Out: Mexican Kennett Square5. Bridging the Community: Nativism, Activism, and the Politics of Belonging6. There and Back Again: The Pilgrimage of Return Migration7. The Ambivalent Welcome: Cinco de Mayo and the Performance of Local Identity and Ethnic RelationsEpilogueNotesReferencesIndex
"Rich and thought provoking." -- Heather A. Smith Population, Space And Place