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This book tells the story of how families separated across borders
write-and learn new ways of writing-in pursuit of love and money.
According to the UN, 244 million people currently live outside
their countries of birth. The human drama behind these numbers is
that parents are often separated from children, brothers from
sisters, lovers from each other. Migration, undertaken in response
to problems of the wallet, also poses problems for the heart.
Writing for Love and Money shows how families separated across
borders turn to writing to address these problems. Based on
research with transnational families in Latin America, Eastern
Europe, and North America, it describes how people write to sustain
meaningful relationships across distance and to better their often
impoverished circumstances. Despite policy makers' concerns about
"brain drain," the book reveals that immigrants' departures do not
leave homelands wholly educationally hobbled. Instead, migration
promotes experiences of literacy learning in transnational families
as they write to reach the two life goals that globalization
consistently threatens: economic solvency and familial intimacy.
This book tells the story of how families separated across borders
write-and learn new ways of writing-in pursuit of love and money.
According to the UN, 244 million people currently live outside
their countries of birth. The human drama behind these numbers is
that parents are often separated from children, brothers from
sisters, lovers from each other. Migration, undertaken in response
to problems of the wallet, also poses problems for the heart.
Writing for Love and Money shows how families separated across
borders turn to writing to address these problems. Based on
research with transnational families in Latin America, Eastern
Europe, and North America, it describes how people write to sustain
meaningful relationships across distance and to better their often
impoverished circumstances. Despite policy makers' concerns about
"brain drain," the book reveals that immigrants' departures do not
leave homelands wholly educationally hobbled. Instead, migration
promotes experiences of literacy learning in transnational families
as they write to reach the two life goals that globalization
consistently threatens: economic solvency and familial intimacy.
American by Paper reveals how two groups of immigrants who share a
primary language nevertheless have very different experiences of
literacy in the United States. It describes the social realities
facing documented and undocumented immigrants who use everyday acts
of writing to negotiate papers—the visas, green cards, and
passports that promise access to the American Dream. It is both an
ethnography, filled with illuminating details about contemporary
immigrant lives, and a critical intervention into two leading—and
conflicting—scholarly ideas of literacy and its social role.
Although popular thinking and scholarship have viewed literacy as a
method of culturally assimilating immigrants into the nation, Kate
Vieira finds that upward mobility and social inclusion in the
United States are tied to literacy in complex ways. She draws from
extensive interviews with Portuguese-speaking migrants who live and
work together in a former mill town in Massachusetts that she calls
South Mills: one group from the Azores, who are usually documented,
and another from Brazil, who are usually undocumented. She explains
how these migrants experience literacy not as a vehicle for
assimilation (as educational policy makers often assert) nor as a
means of resisting oppression (as literacy scholars often hope) but
instead as tied up in papers, particularly in the papers that
confer legal status. Papers and literacy are inextricably bound
together, both promoting and constraining opportunities, and they
shape why and how migrants read and write. Vieira builds on
insights from literacy theories that have long been in opposition
to each other in order to develop a new sociomaterial theory of
literacy, one that takes into account its inseparable link to
paper, forms, and documentation. This point of view leads to a
deeper understanding of how literacy actually accrues meaning by
circulating, and recirculating, through institutions and the lives
of individuals.
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