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Book
The revolutionaries try again
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ISBN: 9781566894463 1566894468 Year: 2016 Publisher: Minneapolis : Coffee House Press,

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"Extravagant, absurd, and self-aware, The Revolutionaries Try Again plays out against the lost decade of Ecuador's austerity and the stymied idealism of three childhood friends-an expat, a bureaucrat, and a playwright-who are as sure about the evils of dictatorship as they are unsure of everything else, including each other. Everyone thinks they're the chosen ones, Masha wrote on Antonio's manuscript. See About Schmidt with Jack Nicholson. Then she quoted from Hope Against Hope by Nadezhda Mandelstam, because she was sure Antonio hadn't read her yet: Can a man really be held accountable for his own actions? His behavior, even his character, is always in the merciless grip of the age, which squeezes out of him the drop of good or evil that it needs from him. In San Francisco, besides the accumulation of wealth, what does the age ask of your so called protagonist? No wonder he never returns to Ecuador. Mauro Javier Cardenas grew up in Guayaquil, Ecuador, and graduated with a degree in Economics from Stanford University. Excerpts from his first novel, The Revolutionaries Try Again, have appeared in Conjunctions, the Antioch Review, Guernica, Witness, and BOMB. His interviews and essays on/with Laszlo Krasznahorkai, Javier Marias, Horacio Castellanos Moya, Juan Villoro, and Antonio Lobo Antunes have appeared in Music & Literature, San Francisco Chronicle, BOMB, and the Quarterly Conversation"--

La chulla vida : gender, migration, and the family in Andean Ecuador and New York City
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ISBN: 9780815631453 0815631456 Year: 2007 Publisher: Syracuse, N.Y. Syracuse University Press

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Book
Unraveling Time : Thirty Years of Ethnography in Cuenca, Ecuador.
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ISBN: 9781477326206 Year: 2022 Publisher: Honolulu : University of Texas Press,

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Ann Miles has been chronicling life in the Ecuadorian city of Cuenca for more than thirty years. In that time, she has witnessed change after change. A large regional capital where modern trains whisk residents past historic plazas, Cuenca has invited in the world and watched as its own citizens risk undocumented migration abroad. Families have arrived from rural towns only to then be displaced from the gentrifying city center. Over time, children have been educated, streetlights have made neighborhoods safer, and remittances from overseas have helped build new homes and sometimes torn people apart. Roads now connect people who once were far away, and talking or texting on cell phones has replaced hanging out at the corner store. Unraveling Time traces the enduring consequences of political and social movements, transnational migration, and economic development in Cuenca. Miles reckons with details that often escape less committed observers, suggesting that we learn a good deal more when we look back on whole lives. Practicing what she calls an ethnography of accrual, Miles takes a long view, where decades of seemingly disparate experiences coalesce into cultural transformation. Her approach not only reveals what change has meant in a major Latin American city but also serves as a reflection on ethnography itself.

Transnational peasants : migrations, networks, and ethnicity in Andean Ecuador
Author:
ISBN: 0801876338 9780801876332 0801864305 9780801864308 9780801872402 0801872405 Year: 2000 Publisher: Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press,

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One of the hallmarks of contemporary international migration is not simply its scope but its geographic and ethnic diversity. Do new migrant groups follow the well-known patterns of past immigrations or do they forge new strategies? How well do existing theories of international migration fare in explaining new cases of transnational mobility? The first book on the variety of transnational migrations from Ecuador, Transnational Peasants provides an intriguing historical and sociological exploration of a contemporary migration mystery: Why do two groups from the same country pursue radically different economic strategies of transnational mobility?David Kyle examines the lives of people from four rural communities in two regions of the Andean highlands of Ecuador. Migrants from the southern province of Azuay shuttle back and forth to New York City, mostly as undocumented laborers. In contrast, an indigenous group of Quichua-speakers from the northern canton of Otavalo travel the world as handicraft merchants and musicians playing Andean music. In one village, Kyle found that Otavalans were migrating to 23 different countries and returning within a year.Kyle rejects the notion that contemporary globalization through technology is the primary cause of this mobility. He argues that patterns of transnationalism, developed over several centuries and varying by region and ethnicity, continue to play a crucial role in who will leave Ecuador and who will stay. Yet migrants' use of professional "migration merchants", including smugglers, leads to a phenomenon that transcends the original sending conditions of the 1980s; even cash-poor rural small-holders in communities lacking telephone service can buy a clandestine passage to Manhattan.


Book
When the Sahara was green : how our greatest desert came to be
Author:
ISBN: 0691228892 Year: 2021 Publisher: Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press,

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"The little-known history of how the Sahara was transformed from a green and fertile land into the largest hot desert in the world. The Sahara is the largest hot desert in the world, equal in size to China or the United States. Yet, this arid expanse was once a verdant, pleasant land, fed by rivers and lakes. The Sahara sustained abundant plant and animal life, such as Nile perch, turtles, crocodiles, and hippos, and attracted prehistoric hunters and herders. What transformed this land of lakes into a sea of sands? When the Sahara Was Green describes the remarkable history of Earth's greatest desert-including why its climate changed, the impact this had on human populations, and how scientists uncovered the evidence for these extraordinary events. From the Sahara's origins as savanna woodland and grassland to its current arid incarnation, Martin Williams takes us on a vivid journey through time. He describes how the desert's ancient rocks were first fashioned, how dinosaurs roamed freely across the land, and how it was later covered in tall trees. Along the way, Williams addresses many questions: Why was the Sahara previously much wetter, and will it be so again? Did humans contribute to its desertification? What was the impact of extreme climatic episodes-such as prolonged droughts-upon the Sahara's geology, ecology, and inhabitants? Williams also shows how plants, animals, and humans have adapted to the Sahara and what lessons we might learn for living in harmony with the harshest, driest conditions in an ever-changing global environment. A valuable look at how an iconic region has changed over millions of years, When the Sahara Was Green reveals the desert's surprising past to reflect on its present, as well as its possible future"--

Keywords

Climatic changes --- Desertification --- Aeolian processes. --- Algae. --- Algeria. --- Alluvium. --- Americas. --- Andes. --- Anthozoa. --- Arid. --- Atlantic Ocean. --- Black coral. --- Bolivia. --- Carbon dioxide. --- Chad Basin. --- Chile. --- Climate change. --- Cnidaria. --- Cnidocyte. --- Coal. --- Coral reef. --- Date palm. --- Dendrochronology. --- Deriba Caldera. --- Desert climate. --- Desert. --- Desertification. --- Drought. --- Dry lake. --- Dry valley. --- Dune. --- Earth materials. --- Earth science. --- Earth's orbit. --- East Africa. --- Ecosystem. --- Ecuadorians. --- El Niño-Southern Oscillation. --- Emblem book. --- Erosion. --- Exploration. --- Far North (South Australia). --- Feather. --- Fertilizer. --- Fire coral. --- Goatskin (material). --- Google Earth. --- Grassland. --- Grazing. --- Great Sand Sea. --- Green development. --- Groundwater. --- Herbicide. --- Herder. --- Hippos. --- Iferouane. --- Inca Empire. --- Indo-Pacific. --- Kufra. --- Lake Chad. --- Land snail. --- Libyan Desert. --- Mauritania. --- Mediterranean Sea. --- Mesa. --- Microclimate. --- Monsoon. --- Neolithic. --- Nile. --- North Africa. --- North America. --- Overgrazing. --- Pastoralism. --- Perennial water. --- Pesticide. --- Photosynthesis. --- Plankton. --- Planula. --- Plate tectonics. --- Pollution. --- Polyp. --- Sahara. --- Sand. --- Savanna. --- Sediment. --- Semi-arid climate. --- Silt. --- Soil. --- Solar energy. --- Stolon. --- Stone tool. --- Surface layer. --- Temperate climate. --- Tentacle. --- The Natural Step. --- Tropics. --- Tunisia. --- Vegetation. --- Weathering. --- West Africa. --- Westerlies. --- Year. --- Sahara --- Climate --- History. --- Aeolian processes. --- Algae. --- Algeria. --- Alluvium. --- Americas. --- Andes. --- Anthozoa. --- Arid. --- Atlantic Ocean. --- Black coral. --- Bolivia. --- Carbon dioxide. --- Chad Basin. --- Chile. --- Climate change. --- Cnidaria. --- Cnidocyte. --- Coal. --- Coral reef. --- Date palm. --- Dendrochronology. --- Deriba Caldera. --- Desert climate. --- Desert. --- Desertification. --- Drought. --- Dry lake. --- Dry valley. --- Dune. --- Earth materials. --- Earth science. --- Earth's orbit. --- East Africa. --- Ecosystem. --- Ecuadorians. --- El Niño-Southern Oscillation. --- Emblem book. --- Erosion. --- Exploration. --- Far North (South Australia). --- Feather. --- Fertilizer. --- Fire coral. --- Goatskin (material). --- Google Earth. --- Grassland. --- Grazing. --- Great Sand Sea. --- Green development. --- Groundwater. --- Herbicide. --- Herder. --- Hippos. --- Iferouane. --- Inca Empire. --- Indo-Pacific. --- Kufra. --- Lake Chad. --- Land snail. --- Libyan Desert. --- Mauritania. --- Mediterranean Sea. --- Mesa. --- Microclimate. --- Monsoon. --- Neolithic. --- Nile. --- North Africa. --- North America. --- Overgrazing. --- Pastoralism. --- Perennial water. --- Pesticide. --- Photosynthesis. --- Plankton. --- Planula. --- Plate tectonics. --- Pollution. --- Polyp. --- Sahara. --- Sand. --- Savanna. --- Sediment. --- Semi-arid climate. --- Silt. --- Soil. --- Solar energy. --- Stolon. --- Stone tool. --- Surface layer. --- Temperate climate. --- Tentacle. --- The Natural Step. --- Tropics. --- Tunisia. --- Vegetation. --- Weathering. --- West Africa. --- Westerlies. --- Year.


Book
Ecuadorians in Madrid : Migrants' Place in Urban History
Author:
ISBN: 1349710547 1137536063 1137536071 Year: 2016 Publisher: New York : Palgrave Macmillan US : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,

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In the decade between 1998-2008, Spain became the main destination for Ecuadorian migrants, and Madrid, Spain's capital, became the city with the largest Ecuadorian population outside of Ecuador. Through a combination of ethnographic research and cultural analysis, this book addresses the interconnections between spatial practices, cultural production, and definitions of citizenship in migration dynamics between Ecuador and Spain, showing how Ecuadorians are key actors in Madrid's recent urban history. Looking at the city as form and content, constitutive and constituting of ideological processes, each chapter analyzes the spatial practices of Madrid's Ecuadorian residents through various forms: the body, the home, public and leisure spaces, the city, the nation, and transnational circuits. Rather than addressing migrants as a general human type marked by (dis)placement, each chapter offers an illustration of how Ecuadorian migrants forge transnational processes through their everyday lives in specific time and place, and how these processes manifest culturally on both sides of the Atlantic.

Keywords

Ecuadorians --- Immigrants --- Transnationalism --- City and town life --- Spain & Portugal --- Regions & Countries - Europe --- History & Archaeology --- History --- Social aspects --- Madrid (Spain) --- Ethnic relations --- Social life and customs --- Trans-nationalism --- Transnational migration --- Emigrants --- Foreign-born population --- Foreign population --- Foreigners --- Migrants --- Ecuadorans --- Ecuadoreans --- City life --- Town life --- Urban life --- Ma-te-li (Spain) --- Mageritah (Spain) --- Matricen (Spain) --- Mayrit (Spain) --- Villa de Madrid (Spain) --- Мадрид (Spain) --- مدريد (Spain) --- Madrit (Spain) --- Горад Мадрыд (Spain) --- Horad Madryd (Spain) --- Мадрыд (Spain) --- Madryd (Spain) --- Madridi (Spain) --- Μαδρίτη (Spain) --- Madritē (Spain) --- Madrido (Spain) --- Mairil (Spain) --- Madril (Spain) --- Maidrid (Spain) --- 마드리드 (Spain) --- Madŭridŭ (Spain) --- Makelika (Spain) --- מדריד (Spain) --- Sociology, Urban --- International relations --- Persons --- Aliens --- Ethnology --- Sociology, Urban. --- Migration. --- Ethnicity. --- Area studies. --- Demography. --- Urban Studies/Sociology. --- Ethnicity Studies. --- Area Studies. --- Social Structure, Social Inequality. --- Historical demography --- Social sciences --- Population --- Vital statistics --- Area research --- Foreign area studies --- Education --- Research --- Geography --- Ethnic identity --- Group identity --- Cultural fusion --- Multiculturalism --- Cultural pluralism --- Urban sociology --- Cities and towns --- Study and teaching --- Emigration and immigration. --- Social structure. --- Social inequality. --- Egalitarianism --- Inequality --- Social equality --- Social inequality --- Political science --- Sociology --- Democracy --- Liberty --- Organization, Social --- Social organization --- Anthropology --- Social institutions --- Immigration --- International migration --- Migration, International --- Population geography --- Assimilation (Sociology) --- Colonization --- Equality.

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