Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies: Migrant Farmworkers in the United States

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Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies: Migrant Farmworkers in the United States

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Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies provides an intimate examination of the everyday lives, suffering, and resistance of Mexican migrants in our contemporary...

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Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies provides an intimate examination of the everyday lives, suffering, and resistance of Mexican migrants in our contemporary food system. Seth Holmes, an anthropologist and MD in the mold of Paul Farmer and Didier Fassin, shows how market forces, anti-immigrant sentiment, and racism undermine health and health care. Holmes was invited to trek with his companions clandestinely through the desert into Arizona and was jailed with them before they were deported. He lived with Indigenous families in the mountains of Oaxaca and in farm labor camps in the United States, planted and harvested corn, picked strawberries, and accompanied sick workers to clinics and hospitals. This “embodied anthropology” deepens our theoretical understanding of the ways in which social inequities come to be perceived as normal and natural in society and in health care. In a substantive new epilogue, Holmes and Indigenous Oaxacan scholar Jorge Ramirez-Lopez provide a current examination of the challenges facing farmworkers and the lives and resistance of the protagonists featured in the book.

  • Format:
  • Pages:234 pages
  • Publication:
  • Publisher:
  • Edition:First Edition, With a Foreword by Philippe Bourgois
  • Language:eng
  • ISBN10:0520275144
  • ISBN13:9780520275140
  • kindle Asin:0520954793

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Seth Holmes

Seth Holmes

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