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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Rebecca M. SchreiberPublisher: University of Minnesota Press Imprint: University of Minnesota Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 5.10cm , Length: 21.60cm ISBN: 9781517900236ISBN 10: 1517900239 Pages: 360 Publication Date: 13 March 2018 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , General , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsPreface Introduction: Migrant Lives and the Promise of Documentation Part I. Ordinary Identifications and Unseen America 1. “We See What We Know”: Migrant Labor and the Place of Pictures 2. The Border’s Frame: Between Poughkeepsie and La Ciénega Part II. Documentary, Self-Representation, and “Collaborations” in the U.S.–Mexico Borderlands 3. Visible Frictions: The Border Film Project and the “Spectacle of Surveillance” 4. Refusing Disposability: Representational Strategies in Maquilápolis: City of Factories Part III. Counter-Optics: Disruptions in the Field of the Visible 5. Disappearance and Counter-Spectacle in Sanctuary City / Ciudad Santuario, 1989–2009 6. Reconfiguring Documentation: Mobility, Counter-Visibility, and (Un)Documented Activism Conclusion: Counter-Representational Acts Acknowledgments Notes IndexReviewsThe Undocumented Everyday is a powerful and compelling account of the creative and critical documentary media strategies deployed to intervene in the representational politics of Mexican and Central American migration to the United States. This book is a nuanced aesthetic and cultural analysis of an important understudied media archive and an urgent political debate. -Ramon H. Rivera-Servera, Northwestern University In a perilous political moment when nativists depict migrants as a problem, Rebecca M. Schreiber foregrounds migrant self-representations. Focusing on post-9/11 photo, film, and video projects by and about Mexican and Central American migrants, The Undocumented Everyday brilliantly examines the dialectic between visibility and invisibility. Schreiber analyzes an 'aesthetics of disappearance' in which the absence of visual representations of the migrants themselves shifts the focus to the tactics of state police power. At the same time migrants revise and combine documentary conventions with an aesthetics associated with 'amateur' media in order to center their views and criticize the state. After reading The Undocumented Everyday, scholars and students alike will see migration through critically different eyes. -Curtis Marez, author of Farm Worker Futurism: Speculative Technologies of Resistance The Undocumented Everyday is a powerful and compelling account of the creative and critical documentary media strategies deployed to intervene in the representational politics of Mexican and Central American migration to the United States. This book is a nuanced aesthetic and cultural analysis of an important understudied media archive and an urgent political debate. --Ramon H. Rivera-Servera, Northwestern University In a perilous political moment when nativists depict migrants as a problem, Rebecca M. Schreiber foregrounds migrant self-representations. Focusing on post-9/11 photo, film, and video projects by and about Mexican and Central American migrants, The Undocumented Everyday brilliantly examines the dialectic between visibility and invisibility. Schreiber analyzes an 'aesthetics of disappearance' in which the absence of visual representations of the migrants themselves shifts the focus to the tactics of state police power. At the same time migrants revise and combine documentary conventions with an aesthetics associated with 'amateur' media in order to center their views and criticize the state. After reading The Undocumented Everyday, scholars and students alike will see migration through critically different eyes. --Curtis Marez, author of Farm Worker Futurism: Speculative Technologies of Resistance Author InformationRebecca M. Schreiber is associate professor of American studies at the University of New Mexico. She is author of Cold War Exiles in Mexico: U.S. Dissidents and the Culture of Critical Resistance (Minnesota, 2008). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |