Life's Work Geographies of Social Reproduction

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Edition: 1st
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2004-05-21
Publisher(s): Wiley-Blackwell
List Price: $38.67

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Summary

Life's Work is a study of the shifting spaces and material practices of social reproduction in the global era. The volume blurs the heavily drawn boundaries between production and reproduction, showing through case studies of migration, education and domesticity how the practices of everyday life challenge these categorical distinctions. New and innovative study of the shifting spaces and material practices of social reproduction in the global era. Investigates changing conceptions of subjectivity, national identity and modernity. Focuses on both theoretical and practical issues. Includes case studies on migration, education and domesticity.

Author Biography

Katharyne Mitchell is an Associate Professor in the Department of Geography at the University of Washington. She is co-editor of The Companion Guide to Political Geography, and has published in the area of immigration, urban geography and transnational studies in journals such as Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, Society and Space, Antipode, Political Geography, Urban Geography and Economic Geography. She is currently completing a monograph entitled, Transnationalism and the Politics of Space, for Temple University Press. Mitchell’s latest research focuses on the impact of transnational migration on conceptions of education, with a particular emphasis on how children are educated to become citizens of a particular nation-state. This ongoing research has been funded by the Simpson Center of the University of Washington, the Spencer Foundation, and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.


Sallie A. Marston is Professor of Geography at the University of Arizona in Tucson. Her work focuses on space, difference and politics. She is the author of numerous articles on urban space and political questions of gender, ethnicity, race and sexuality published in, among others, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Progress in Human Geography, Society and Space, Political Geography, Urban Geography. She is on the editorial board of several journals and the author of two textbooks Places and Regions in Global Context: Human Geography and World Regions in Global Context: Peoples, Places, and Environments. She is co-editor of Making Worlds: Gender, Metaphor, Materiality with Susan Aiken, Ann Brigham and Penny Waterstone. She is currently working on a monograph that explores identity politics and new state practices around the spaces of discourse and representation entitled Acting Out in Public: The St. Patrick's Day Parade and Struggles over the Production of Meaning and Identity in the Streets of New York.


Cindi Katz is Professor of Geography in Environmental Psychology and Women's Studies at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her work concerns social reproduction and the production of space, place and nature; children and the environment, and the consequences of global economic restructuring for everyday life. She has published widely on these themes as well as on social theory and the politics of knowledge in edited collections and in journals such as Society and Space, Social Text, Signs, Feminist Studies, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Social Justice, and Antipode. She is the editor (with Janice Monk) of Full Circles: Geographies of Gender over the Life Course (Routledge 1993) and recently completed Disintegrating Developments: Global Economic Restructuring and Children's Everyday Lives forthcoming in 2004 (University of Minnesota Press). She is currently working on a project called Retheorizing Childhood and another on the Social Wage.

Table of Contents

Notes on Contributors vii
Life's Work: An Introduction, Review and Critique 1(26)
Katharyne Mitchell
Sallie A Marston
Cindi Katz
Education and the Making of the Modern (Trans) national Subject
27(68)
Imagined Country: National Environmental Ideologies in School Geography Textbooks
28(19)
John Morgan
Indigenous Professionalization: Transnational Social Reproduction in the Andes
47(28)
Nina Laurie
Robert Andolina
Sarah Radcliffe
Producing the Future: Getting To Be British
75(20)
Jean Lave
Domesticity and Other Homely Spaces of Modernity
95(68)
Domesticating Birth in the Hospital: ``Family-Centered'' Birth and the Emergence of ``Homelike'' Birthing Rooms
96(23)
Maria Fannin
Adolescent Latina Bodyspaces: Making Homegirls, Homebodies and Homeplaces
119(22)
Melissa Hyams
Of Fictional Cities and ``Diasporic'' Aesthetics
141(22)
Rosemary Marangoly George
Modern Migrants/Flexible Citizens: Cultural Constructions of Belonging and Alienation
163(63)
Valuing Childcare: Troubles in Suburbia
164(21)
Geraldine Pratt
Toque una Ranchcra, Por Favor
185(18)
Altha J Cravey
Human Smuggling, the Transnational Imaginary, and Everyday Geographics of the Nation-State
203(23)
Alison Mountz
Index 226

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