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Barnes and Noble

Producing Mayaland: Colonial Legacies, Urbanization, and the Unfolding of Global Capitalism

Current price: $94.95
Producing Mayaland: Colonial Legacies, Urbanization, and the Unfolding of Global Capitalism
Producing Mayaland: Colonial Legacies, Urbanization, and the Unfolding of Global Capitalism

Barnes and Noble

Producing Mayaland: Colonial Legacies, Urbanization, and the Unfolding of Global Capitalism

Current price: $94.95
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Size: Hardcover

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Producing Mayaland

powerfully captures the extent to which the abstract spaces of global capital are infused with colonial fantasies, haunted by uncanny ruins, and plagued by monstrous manifestations of ecological breakdown. Through a compelling account of the maquiladora industry in the Yucatan Peninsula, Claudia Fonseca Alfaro vividly conveys the inextricable entanglements of the capitalist production of space and the coloniality of power.”
—Japhy Wilson, School of Social Sciences, University of Manchester, UK
“In
, Claudia Fonseca Alfaro finds a unique voice to narrate the contested relations between everyday life, urbanization and the uneven development of capitalism in Motul, Yucatán, Mexico. The remarkable insights of this work emerge from her innovative synthesis of critical urban theory, anticolonialism and ‘magical realism’— all grounded in an imaginative appropriation of Henri Lefebvre’s oeuvre on the production of space.”
— Kanishka Goonewardena, Professor of Geography and Planning, University of Toronto
Critical urban theory and postcolonial approaches are brought together in this compelling book to explore the relationship between colonial legacies, urbanization, and global capitalism in southern Mexico.
investigates the boom-to-bust story of maquiladoras in the state of Yucatán to shed light on how the built environment was shaped by discourse, imaginaries, and everyday practices. In making sense of this social production of space, the author examines infrastructure constructed to support the maquiladora project and traces the attempts of the state to portray Yucatán as an exotic and business-friendly maquiladora paradise. These practices stand in contrast to the livelihood strategies and life stories of maquiladora workers and residents. Carefully weaving geography, history, and ethnography, the author draws on a wide range of sources to illustrate a central tension in capitalism: its tendency to homogenize while thriving in differentiation. With important insights into an understudied location,
urges us to understand urbanization in the global South in new ways.

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