Description

Book Synopsis
Are you an American, or are you not? This is the question at the heart of Katherine Benton-Cohen's provocative history, which ties a seemingly remote corner of the country to one of America's central concerns: the historical creation of racial boundaries.

Trade Review
Brilliant. -- Jeff Biggers * Huffington Post *
A splendid study of the contested meaning of "American" from the 1880s through the New Deal, this is an episodic case study of Cochise County, Arizona, best known as the locus for the gunfight at the OK Corral. -- E. R. Crowther * Choice *
Benton-Cohen uses the backdrop of the Wild West, with its bustling commerce and growing population, to wage a discussion on racial division and the power of "white privilege"--even where the black-white dichotomy didn't necessarily exist--in this richly detailed anthropological look into the creation of racial boundaries and their application in present-day immigration reform debates. * Publishers Weekly *
Combining the remarkable investigative talents of an ace sleuth with the lucid prose of an accomplished storyteller, Katherine Benton-Cohen shows how a deceptively simple question--who is an American?--shaped everyday life for the polyglot peoples of Arizona's Cochise County. Especially insightful, and particularly troubling, is her account of the hardening of racial categories along the U.S.-Mexican border. Anyone who cares about the historical origins of contemporary debates about race, immigration, and power will need to reckon with the stories of the "borderline Americans" whose lives Benton-Cohen reconstructs with such grace and compassion. -- Thomas G. Andrews, author of Killing for Coal: America's Deadliest Labor War
This book not only offers drama, but it will change the way that historians think about race, labor and gender in the southwestern US. In fact, it points to rethinking what Americanism was and is. -- Linda Gordon, author of The Great Arizona Orphan Abduction
Benton-Cohen has crafted a jewel of social history, the most insightful local study I have read in years. Her absorbing narrative will turn Cochise County, 'a place in the middle of nowhere,' into a memorable location for anyone who cares about the tortured, fascinating history of race in modern America. -- Michael Kazin, author of A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan
In a beautifully written book, Benton-Cohen provides a compelling exploration of race in the Arizona borderlands. She has a talent for grabbing readers' attention, for assembling a fascinating cast of characters--ranging from Geronimo to Felix Frankfurter--and for heightening the anticipation of her audience. Her descriptions of small towns are as lively as her accounts of nasty labor conflicts, and I was so eager to find out what she had to say about the Bisbee Deportation that I found the book hard to put down. -- Peggy Pascoe, author of What Comes Naturally: Miscegenation Law and the Making of Race in America
The Arizona–Sonora borderland is a messy, volatile place where American authorities have worked hard to draw neat, static lines. In this lively and revealing book, we see that the boundaries that have divided space and inscribed race are products of history, not nature or fate. When you visit this country, it’s good to have a guide, and you’ll find none better than Benton-Cohen. -- Virginia Scharff, author of Twenty Thousand Roads: Women, Movement, and the American West

Table of Contents
* Introduction * A Shared World in Tres Alamos * Race and Conflict in Tombstone * The White Man's Camp in Bisbee *"A Better Man for Us" in Warren * Mormons and Mexicans in the San Pedro River Valley * Women and Men in the Sulphur Springs and San Simon Valleys * The Bisbee Deportation * One County, Two Races * Conclusion * Abbreviations * Notes * Acknowledgments * Index

Borderline Americans Racial Division and Labor

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    A Paperback / softback by Katherine Benton-Cohen

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      View other formats and editions of Borderline Americans Racial Division and Labor by Katherine Benton-Cohen

      Publisher: Harvard University Press
      Publication Date: 04/03/2011
      ISBN13: 9780674060531, 978-0674060531
      ISBN10: 0674060539

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Are you an American, or are you not? This is the question at the heart of Katherine Benton-Cohen's provocative history, which ties a seemingly remote corner of the country to one of America's central concerns: the historical creation of racial boundaries.

      Trade Review
      Brilliant. -- Jeff Biggers * Huffington Post *
      A splendid study of the contested meaning of "American" from the 1880s through the New Deal, this is an episodic case study of Cochise County, Arizona, best known as the locus for the gunfight at the OK Corral. -- E. R. Crowther * Choice *
      Benton-Cohen uses the backdrop of the Wild West, with its bustling commerce and growing population, to wage a discussion on racial division and the power of "white privilege"--even where the black-white dichotomy didn't necessarily exist--in this richly detailed anthropological look into the creation of racial boundaries and their application in present-day immigration reform debates. * Publishers Weekly *
      Combining the remarkable investigative talents of an ace sleuth with the lucid prose of an accomplished storyteller, Katherine Benton-Cohen shows how a deceptively simple question--who is an American?--shaped everyday life for the polyglot peoples of Arizona's Cochise County. Especially insightful, and particularly troubling, is her account of the hardening of racial categories along the U.S.-Mexican border. Anyone who cares about the historical origins of contemporary debates about race, immigration, and power will need to reckon with the stories of the "borderline Americans" whose lives Benton-Cohen reconstructs with such grace and compassion. -- Thomas G. Andrews, author of Killing for Coal: America's Deadliest Labor War
      This book not only offers drama, but it will change the way that historians think about race, labor and gender in the southwestern US. In fact, it points to rethinking what Americanism was and is. -- Linda Gordon, author of The Great Arizona Orphan Abduction
      Benton-Cohen has crafted a jewel of social history, the most insightful local study I have read in years. Her absorbing narrative will turn Cochise County, 'a place in the middle of nowhere,' into a memorable location for anyone who cares about the tortured, fascinating history of race in modern America. -- Michael Kazin, author of A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan
      In a beautifully written book, Benton-Cohen provides a compelling exploration of race in the Arizona borderlands. She has a talent for grabbing readers' attention, for assembling a fascinating cast of characters--ranging from Geronimo to Felix Frankfurter--and for heightening the anticipation of her audience. Her descriptions of small towns are as lively as her accounts of nasty labor conflicts, and I was so eager to find out what she had to say about the Bisbee Deportation that I found the book hard to put down. -- Peggy Pascoe, author of What Comes Naturally: Miscegenation Law and the Making of Race in America
      The Arizona–Sonora borderland is a messy, volatile place where American authorities have worked hard to draw neat, static lines. In this lively and revealing book, we see that the boundaries that have divided space and inscribed race are products of history, not nature or fate. When you visit this country, it’s good to have a guide, and you’ll find none better than Benton-Cohen. -- Virginia Scharff, author of Twenty Thousand Roads: Women, Movement, and the American West

      Table of Contents
      * Introduction * A Shared World in Tres Alamos * Race and Conflict in Tombstone * The White Man's Camp in Bisbee *"A Better Man for Us" in Warren * Mormons and Mexicans in the San Pedro River Valley * Women and Men in the Sulphur Springs and San Simon Valleys * The Bisbee Deportation * One County, Two Races * Conclusion * Abbreviations * Notes * Acknowledgments * Index

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