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Americans - Regional Biography, Latinos & Latin Americans, United States Studies, Immigration & Emigration - United States, Immigration & Emigration
From Cuenca to Queens by Ann Miles β€” book cover

From Cuenca to Queens

by Ann Miles
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Overview

Transnational migration is a controversial and much-discussed issue in both the popular media and the social sciences, but at its heart migration is about individual people making the difficult choice to leave their families and communities in hopes of achieving greater economic prosperity. Vicente Quitasaca is one of these people. In 1995 he left his home in the Ecuadorian city of Cuenca to live and work in New York City. This anthropological story of Vicente's migration and its effects on his life and the lives of his parents and siblings adds a crucial human dimension to statistics about immigration and the macro impact of transnational migration on the global economy.

Anthropologist Ann Miles has known the Quitasacas since 1989. Her long acquaintance with the family allows her to delve deeply into the factors that eventually impelled the oldest son to make the difficult and dangerous journey to the United States as an undocumented migrant. Focusing on each family member in turn, Miles explores their varying perceptions of social inequality and racism in Ecuador and their reactions to Vicente's migration. As family members speak about Vicente's new, hard-to-imagine life in America, they reveal how transnational migration becomes a symbol of failure, hope, resignation, and promise for poor people in struggling economies. Miles frames this fascinating family biography with an analysis of the historical and structural conditions that encourage transnational migration, so that the Quitasacas' story becomes a vivid firsthand illustration of this growing global phenomenon.

About the Author, Ann Miles

ANN MILES is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Women's Studies at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo.

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Editorials

Library Journal

"Until now I am like a river, going, going, but I don't know where I'm going to end up." In these simple words, Vicente Quitasaca summarizes his migration from the modest Ecuadorian city of Cuenca to New York-a journey more and more migrants from Latin America are taking to find economic prosperity and make a new life for themselves and the families remaining at home. Miles (anthropology & women's studies, Western Michigan Univ.) followed the Quitasaca family-mother, father, three sons, and three daughters-over a 15-year period marked by poverty, sadness, family stress, and the departure of eldest son, Vicente, in 1995. Miles offers much insight into the dynamics of life in Ecuador and Vicente's struggles as an illegal immigrant in one of the world's largest cities, first as a waiter and then in construction; like so many other Hispanics who come to America, he truly does not know where he is "going to end up." Recommended for academic libraries and larger public libraries.-Boyd Childress, Auburn Univ. Lib., AL Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2004
Publisher
Austin : University of Texas Press, 2004.
Pages
247
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780292702059

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