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For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38673"},["text","Mexican Migration and the Social Space of Postmodernism"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"51"},["name","Type"],["description","The nature or genre of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38674"},["text","Journal Article"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"39"},["name","Creator"],["description","An entity primarily responsible for making the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38675"},["text","Roger Rouse"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"40"},["name","Date"],["description","A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38676"},["text","1991"]]]]]],["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"5"},["name","Zotero"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"179"},["name","Title"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38677"},["text","Mexican Migration and the Social Space of Postmodernism"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"82"},["name","Item Type"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38678"},["text","Journal Article"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"55"},["name","Author"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38679"},["text","Roger Rouse"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"181"},["name","URL"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38680"},["text","http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/diaspora_a_journal_of_transnational_studies/v001/1.1.rouse.html"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"184"},["name","Volume"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38681"},["text","1"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"129"},["name","Issue"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38682"},["text","1"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"148"},["name","Pages"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38683"},["text","8-23"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"158"},["name","Publication Title"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38684"},["text","Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"86"},["name","ISSN"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38685"},["text","1911-1568"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"111"},["name","Date"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38686"},["text","1991"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"121"},["name","Extra"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38687"},["text","<p>Volume 1, Number 1, Spring 1991</p>"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"84"},["name","DOI"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38688"},["text","10.1353/dsp.1991.0011"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"88"},["name","Access Date"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38689"},["text","2013-08-05 14:48:21"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"138"},["name","Library Catalog"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38690"},["text","Project MUSE"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"87"},["name","Abstract Note"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38691"},["text","In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:\n        \n\nRoger Rouse  \nRoger Rouse is assistant professor of anthropology at the\nUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He is currently a visiting\nresearch fellow at the University of California, Davis, Center for\nComparative Research, where he is completing a book on the topic of\nhis 1989 Stanford dissertation, \"Mexican Migration to the USA:\nFamily Relations in the Development of a Transnational Migrant\nCircuit.\"\n\n\nNotes\n\n\n\nThe first version of this paper was written in early 1988 while\nI was a visiting research fellow at the Center for U.S.-Mexican\nStudies, University of California, San Diego. It draws on fieldwork\ncarried out between 1982 and 1984 under a doctoral fellowship from\nthe Inter-American Foundation. I am grateful to both organizations\nfor their support. Many of the ideas contained in the paper were\ndeveloped in a study group on postmodernism organized with\ncolleagues from the center. My principal thanks—for comments,\ncriticisms, and immensely pleasant company—go to the group's\nmembers: Josefina Alcazar, Alberto Aziz, Roger Bartra, Luin\nGoldring, Lidia Pico, Claudia Schatán, and Francisco Valdés. I have\nalso benefited from Khachig Tölölyan's sensitive reading of the\ntext.\n\n\n\n\n1. See Lockwood and Leinberger 35. The assertion of a false\npoint of origin is apparently used so that the manufacturers can\nparticipate in foreign delivery contracts. See Soja 217.\n\n\n2. \"Hoy, ocho años de mi partida, cuando me preguntan por mi\nnacionalidad o identidad étnica, no puedo responder con una\npalabra, pues mi 'identidad' ya posee repertorios múltiples: soy\nmexicano pero tambien soy chicano y latinoamericano. En la frontera\nme dicen 'chilango' o 'mexiquillo;' en la capital 'pocho' o\n'norteno' y en España 'sudaca.' . . . Mi compañera Emilia es\nangloitaliana pero habla español con acento argentine; y juntos\ncaminamos entre los escombros de la torre de Babel de nuestra\nposmodernidad americana.\" Gómez-Peña (my translation).\n\n\n3. See, for example, Clifford 22; and Rosaldo, Culture and\nTruth 217.\n\n\n4. Jameson 83. Like Jameson, I find it useful to follow Ernest\nMandel in arguing for the emergence since the Second World War of a\nnew phase in monopoly capitalism, but I prefer to label this phase\n\"transnational\" rather than \"late\" partly to avoid the implication\nof imminent transcendence and, more positively, to emphasize the\ncrucial role played by the constant movement of capital, labor, and\ninformation across national borders.\n\n\n5. See Davis, \"Urban Renaissance\"; and Lipsitz, esp. 161.\n\n\n6. It is important to stress that I am concerned not with the\nvarious meanings of this particular term but instead with the image\nitself. The term serves merely as a convenient marker.\n\n\n7. See Williams 65-66.\n\n\n8. Williams 65-66.\n\n\n9. The combination of these images is readily apparent in the\nclassic works on rural social organization by Robert Redfield and\nEric Wolf (The Little Community and Peasant Society and\nCulture and \"Types of Latin American Peasantry\"), both of\nwhom draw heavily on Mexican materials, and can also be seen in\nImmanuel Wallerstein's tendency (in The Capitalist World\nEconomy) to use nation-states as the constituent units of\nhis world system, at least in the core.\n\n\n10. This approach has been used in two related but different\nkinds of study. In work focusing on migration itself—especially on\nmigration within Mexico—changes have commonly been gauged by\ncomparing the forms of organization found in the points of\ndestination with arrangements revealed by detailed research in the\nspecific communities from which the migrants have come. See, for\nexample, Butterworth; Kemper; and Lewis. In work on communities\nknown to contain a significant number of migrants and descendants\nof migrants—and especially in work on Mexican and Chicano\ncommunities in the United States—it has been more common to compare\nforms of organization found in these communities with arrangements\ndiscovered..."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"187"},["name","Attachment Title"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"38692"},["text","Project MUSE Snapshot"]]]]]]]]