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This interdisciplinary collection brings together essays on the cultural effects of globalization at the U.S.-Mexico and U.S.-Canada borders. Artists, activists and scholars from American Studies, anthropology, Chicano studies, English, folklore, history and political science examine a wide range of cultural practices in border areas, including cross-border shopping, migration and transnational media spectatorship. Contributors focus on a variety of border crossers and residents, such as Mexican migrants in the American Southwest, indigenous peoples in the Lake Ontario region, undocumented Chinese immigrants at the U.S.-Canada border, environmental groups in Arizona, NAFTA-displaced women laborers in Texas, squatter communities in Baja California and maquiladora workers in Chihuahua.
"In this collection Sadowski-Smith has brought together an exciting range of essays by scholars, artists, and activists on culture and globalization. The strength of this collection is in the essays; it is not so much a 'new take' on globalization and culture as it is a close look at a variety of cultural practices in which the effects of globalization are especially visible."