• Journey Without End

  • Migration from the Global South Through the Americas
  • By: Andrew Nelson, Rob Curran
  • Narrated by: Zac Aleman
  • Length: 8 hrs and 11 mins
  • 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 rating)

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Journey Without End  By  cover art

Journey Without End

By: Andrew Nelson, Rob Curran
Narrated by: Zac Aleman
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Publisher's summary

Journey without End chronicles the years-long journey of "extracontinentales"—African and South Asian migrants moving through Latin America, toward the United States. Based on five years of collaborative research between a journalist and an anthropologist, this book makes a narrative-driven critique of how state-level immigration policy fails extracontinental migrants.

The book begins with Kidane, an Eritrean migrant who has left his pregnant wife behind to make the four-year trip to North America; it then picks up the natural disaster-riddled voyage of Roshan and Kamala Dhakal from Nepal, to Ecuador; and it continues to the trials of Cameroonian exile Jane Mtebe, who becomes trapped in a bizarre beachside resort town on the edge of the Darien Gap—the gateway from South to Central America.

This book follows these migrants as their fitful voyages put them in a semi-permanent state of legal and existential liminality. Mercurial policy creates profit opportunities that transform migration bottlenecks—Quito's tourist district, a Colombian beachside resort, Panama's Darien Gap, and a Mexican border town—into spontaneous migration-oriented spaces rife with racial, gender, and class exploitation. Throughout this struggle, migrant solidarity allows for occasional glimpses of subaltern cosmopolitanism and the possibility of mobile futures.

©2022 Vanderbilt University Press (P)2023 Tantor

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A contemporary ethnography for your classes

As a trained ethnographer and cultural anthropologist who is always looking for recent and compelling ethnographies for the classroom, I am thrilled to have found this book. Academics already know the basics of the content, but the way that these authors capture the lives and travels of these migrants is priceless. I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to know what it is like for migrants making there way (or trying to make their way) to the US.

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